
Primewire CAT.7 network cable - Ethernet Gigabit Lan cable RJ45 - 10 Gbit/s - patch cable - comp. CAT.6 CAT.8
S/FTP, PiMF, CAT7, 1 m
Primewire CAT.7 network cable - Ethernet Gigabit Lan cable RJ45 - 10 Gbit/s - patch cable - comp. CAT.6 CAT.8
S/FTP, PiMF, CAT7, 1 m
So the description says up to 1000Mbit, not 10gig. What does that mean?
However, the description with a specification of speeds is very unusual because it is wrong in principle. With a network cable, only the category (Cat/Cat) for which it is certified is specified. From this you can then derive the maximum speed for which you can use it. The length of the cable or the entire transmission path also has an influence and only then does the speed finally result. Even with Cat 6 you can transmit 10 Gbit/s (10GBASE-T) over up to 55m.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki...)
By the way, this cable corresponds to Cat 7, but the RJ45 plugs usually only correspond to Cat 6(A). So you don't get much more out of a Cat 7 cable with Cat 6(A) connectors than out of a Cat 6 cable with Cat 6(A) connectors ;-)