A patch cord cable differs from a standard structured cabling in that a patch cable is stranded for flexibility, whereas a standard cable is solid copper. Because the patch cord is stranded copper construction the
attenuation (signal loss) is higher on patch cords than solid cable so short lengths should be adhered to. They can be as short as , to connect stacked components or route signals through a
patch panel, or between for snake cables. As length increases, the cables are thicker or more shielded, or both, to prevent signal loss (
attenuation) and the introduction of unwanted radio frequencies and hum (
electromagnetic interference). Patch cords are often made of
coaxial cables, with the signal carried through a shielded core, and the
electrical ground or earthed return connection carried through a wire mesh surrounding the core. Each end of the cable is attached to a connector so that the cord may be plugged in. Connector types may vary widely, particularly with adapting cables. Patch cords may be: • single-
conductor wires using, for example,
banana connectors (or
pin plugs) •
coaxial cables using, for example,
BNC connectors • shielded or unshielded
Cat5,
Cat5e,
Cat6 or
Cat6A cables using
8P8C (RJ-45)
modular connectors with straight-through
T568A or
T568B wiring (modular cables wired to T568A at one end and T568B on the other are more commonly referred to as
crossover cables) •
qualified optical fiber cables for use with modular fiber optic spectroscopy equipment A patch cord is always fitted with connectors at both ends. A
pigtail is similar to a patch cord and is the informal name given to a cable fitted with a connector at one end and bare wires (or bare fibre) at the other. In the context of copper cabling, these cables are sometimes referred to as
blunt patch cords and the non-connectorized end ("the pigtail") is intended to be permanently attached to a component or terminal.
Optical fiber pigtails, in contrast to copper pigtails, can be more accurately described as a
connector than a cable or cord. A fiber pigtail is a single, short, usually
tight-buffered, optical fiber that has an optical connector pre-installed on one end and a length of exposed fiber at the other end. The end of the fiber pigtail is
stripped and
fusion spliced to a single fiber of a multi-fiber trunk. Splicing of pigtails to each fiber in the trunk "breaks out" the multi-fiber cable into its component fibers for connection to the end equipment. ==Music and sound recording==