Here is a list of the wire colors and functions: * Red: +5 VDC (VCC) * While: Data - (D-) * Green: Data + (D+) * Black: Ground (GND) You can read more detailed information here: http://pinouts.ru/Slots/USB_pinout.shtml
a usb cable has four wires, two for power and two for communication.
There are four wire pairs. White/Blue - Blue, White/Orange - Orange, White/Green - Green, and White/Brown - Brown. Only two pairs are used in Cat5 networks.
USB is not a clothes dryer; there is no "hot" wire. There are four wires in a standard USB cable. One is red (+5v), one is black (ground), one is green (Data transmit), and one is white (Data receive).
Twisted pairs
Easy Setup:Connect 2 Computers Directly Using Crossover Cablehttp://www.home-network-help.com/crossover.HTMLyou will need a crossover cable to do this. pairs are switched allowing communication to occur without a hub or routerTAKE THE CAT5E CABLE AND TWO JACKS.YOU WILL FIND 4 PAIRS OF WIRES. LIKE OW-O,BLUEW-BLUE,GREENW-GREEN,BROWNW-BROWN. IN THIS THERE ONLY FOUR WIRES ARE NEEDED. supoose you have crimped one side like this ow-o-gw-g-blw-bl-brw-br.then other end will be gw-bl-ow-bl-o-brw-br.ow-orange white o-orange blw-blue white bl-blue grw-green white gr-green brw-brown white br-brown COLUR CODE : 1----3 2----6 3----1 4----4 5----5 6----2 7----7 8----8AndBoth computers need to have a NIC(Network Interface Card) installed.The computers need to have different IP addresses in the same IP subnet. This gets set in Network Properties - TCP/IP Properties. Easiest would be to set one at 10.0.0.1 and the other at 10.0.0.2, both with a netmask of 255.255.255.0SOMTIMESA NIC will have the crossover setting in the device driver
a usb cable has four wires, two for power and two for communication.
A four wire cable is one that has four wires in it. Usually a red, black, blue and a white wire. When talking about cables the ground wire is never counted because now a days all cable sets have ground wires in them and are sized to the capacity of the cable's ampacity.
There are four wire pairs. White/Blue - Blue, White/Orange - Orange, White/Green - Green, and White/Brown - Brown. Only two pairs are used in Cat5 networks.
Any category twisted pair cable uses 8 wires for transmitting and receiving data. However, only 4 of the 8 wires are actually used for data transmission.
There are four types of cable reels which one can choose from. There are wooden spools, plywood, plastic or steel drums. They are used to coil various cable and electrical wires.
Usually two cables total. Such as the SATA Cable and the power cable. As for how many wires are in those cables, it would depends on the connection. Such as IDE have 40 wires. Power cables are usually four pin. It all depends.
It depends on the architecture of the cable but the most common is multiple wires in the cable, you only need two wires at a minimum to communicate, one as a ground or base, and the other to for the signal. The devices can also take turns communicating, allowing for two wires to be enough. An example of a two wire cable is the typical headphone cable, though it is in a single direction. Four wires allow for two way communication, one set for transmit, and one for receive, which on the other end the transmit wires become receive, and the receive wires become transmit. A typical example is the Ethernet cable which your computer is most likely connected to the internet with.
There should only be four wire going to this. positive cable, negative cable, and two field terminals, but those are sortof together.
Category 5 is an ethernet networking standard, comprising four pairs of wires twisted together to minimize interference and held in a plastic sleeve.
The cable on a typical GameCube is only about four feet, but that should be plenty of room for most people.
No, but it is a waste of money when you only need three of the four wires when making an extension cord. If you are constructing an extension cord make sure that the ends go to the right end of the cable. Match the wire end when looking at it, to the proper pin configuration of the plug. White to silver, black to brass and green to green terminal. Looking at the end of the cable, it should be matched the plug configurations. On the plug end the wire should match the cable. If it doesn't look at the other end of the cable. No wires should cross when connecting to the blades on the plug, If they do you have the wrong end of the cable.
We need context here.Some kinds of cables use only four wires for communication despite more conductors being physically present. In an ethernet 10/100BaseT cable, for example, only four of the eight wires carry data (the others aren't used at all). The four are the ones attached to pins 1, 2, 3, and 6; these are usuallyorange-white/orange and green-white/green, though which is which can vary depending on which version of the standard the person who made the cable was using.But if you meant something else, you'll need to be more specific. Also, "gigabit" (1000BaseT) cables actually do use all 8 wires.