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7.1 | ![]() |
10 Mbps and 100 Mbps Ethernet | |
7.1.7 | ![]() |
100BASE-TX |
In 1995, 100BASE-TX was the standard,
using Cat 5 UTP
cable, that became commercially successful.
The original coaxial Ethernet used half-duplex transmission so only one device could transmit at a time. However, in 1997, Ethernet was expanded to include a full-duplex capability that allowed more than one PC on a network to transmit at the same time. Switches increasingly replaced hubs. These switches had the capability of full-duplex and rapid handling of Ethernet frames. 100BASE-TX uses 4B/5B encoding, which
is then scrambled and converted to multi-level transmit-3 levels or
MLT-3. Figure
100BASE-TX carries 100 Mbps of traffic in half-duplex mode. In full-duplex mode, 100BASE-TX can exchange 200 Mbps of traffic. The concept of full-duplex will become increasingly important as Ethernet speeds increase.
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