The Coaxial Cable Distance Calculator estimates maximum transmission range from frequency, attenuation per metre, signal-to-noise target, and cable type.
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What Is a Coaxial Cable Distance Calculator?
A coaxial cable distance calculator estimates the maximum length of a cable run that still meets your signal quality target. It uses attenuation data for your specific cable and operating frequency, plus your allowable system loss. The tool subtracts connector and splitter losses, applies a safety margin, and then computes the distance that remains within the budget.
Many systems define the budget in decibels. For power, decibels represent a ratio, not an absolute amount. If the transmitter and receiver levels are known, the calculator converts the difference into allowable loss. If you already know the allowed insertion loss, you can enter that directly to get the result faster.
Some designs also care about time. Coax does not carry signals at the speed of light in a vacuum. It is slower by the cable’s velocity factor. The calculator can therefore report propagation delay, which matters for timing-sensitive links and long runs.

Equations Used by the Coaxial Cable Distance Calculator
The calculator follows a short chain of physics and link budget expressions. These equations connect your variables, such as frequency and cable attenuation, with a distance result in meters or feet. They also keep the units consistent.
- Total allowable insertion loss (dB): Budget = AllowedLoss − ConnectorLoss − SplitterLoss − Margin
- Length from loss: L = Budget / α(f), where α(f) is attenuation in dB per unit length at frequency f
- Attenuation scaling: Loss(dB) = α(f) × Length; α(f) is often given as dB/100 m or dB/100 ft
- Propagation delay: t = L / (c × VF), where c ≈ 299,792,458 m/s and VF is the velocity factor (0–1)
- Power ratio to decibels: dB = 10 log10(Pout/Pin); for voltage in matched systems: dB = 20 log10(Vout/Vin)
Manufacturers publish attenuation versus frequency. If α(f) is provided as dB/100 m, the calculator converts it to dB/m before applying the length equation. When you provide transmitter level and receiver sensitivity, the tool converts them to an allowable loss first, then proceeds with the same distance equation.
How the Coaxial Cable Distance Method Works
The method starts with your application’s performance target. That target usually appears as an acceptable loss or as a minimum received level. Next, you select a cable type and find its attenuation at the operating frequency. The calculator removes fixed losses and a safety margin, then converts the remaining budget into distance.
- Define your acceptable signal loss or compute it from TX/RX levels.
- Choose the cable and read its attenuation at the chosen frequency.
- Subtract known fixed losses: connectors, adapters, splitters, and taps.
- Subtract a design margin to cover aging, temperature, and installation variability.
- Divide the remaining budget by the attenuation per unit length to get distance.
- Optionally compute propagation delay and check timing constraints.
For most users, the result is a maximum length. The same method can also tell you the expected loss for a planned length. That helps you decide between cable types, or whether to add amplification or an active equalizer.
What You Need to Use the Coaxial Cable Distance Calculator
Gather a few parameters before opening the Calculator. You will need values you can trust, especially for frequency and cable attenuation. The rest concerns losses you add in the path and the safety margin you want.
- Operating frequency (MHz or GHz) for your signal of interest.
- Cable type and its attenuation α(f) at that frequency (e.g., dB/100 m).
- Either an allowed insertion loss (dB), or TX power and RX sensitivity (e.g., dBm).
- Connector and accessory losses (count and dB per item).
- Safety margin (dB) to account for aging, heat, moisture, and bends.
- Velocity factor (dimensionless) if you care about propagation delay.
Attenuation rises with frequency, so be sure α(f) matches your frequency band. At very low frequencies, cable loss may be small, but mismatch or interference can dominate. At very high frequencies, datasheets may not cover your exact point; use the closest listed value or the manufacturer’s curve. For long runs, round up the margin when in doubt.
Step-by-Step: Use the Coaxial Cable Distance Calculator
Here’s a concise overview before we dive into the key points:
- Enter your operating frequency in MHz or GHz.
- Select the cable type and enter its attenuation at that frequency in dB per 100 m or per 100 ft.
- Provide allowed insertion loss, or enter TX power and RX sensitivity so the tool can compute it.
- Add connector, adapter, splitter, and tap losses in dB.
- Choose a safety margin in dB to cover variability and environment.
- (Optional) Enter velocity factor if you want propagation delay.
These points provide quick orientation—use them alongside the full explanations in this page.
Real-World Examples
Example 1: A VHF antenna feed uses 75 Ω RG‑6 at 100 MHz. The datasheet shows about 5.6 dB loss per 100 m at this frequency. You can tolerate 12 dB total loss, and you have two connectors (1.0 dB total), one splitter (3.5 dB), and a 3 dB safety margin. The remaining budget is 12 − 1.0 − 3.5 − 3 = 4.5 dB. Distance is L = (4.5 / 5.6) × 100 m ≈ 80 m. With a velocity factor of 0.85, delay is t ≈ 80 / (299,792,458 × 0.85) ≈ 0.313 µs. What this means: Your RG‑6 run should not exceed about 80 m, and the signal will arrive ~0.3 µs later.
Example 2: A 2.4 GHz access point connects to an outdoor antenna with low‑loss LMR‑400. The datasheet lists ~22.3 dB loss per 100 m at 2.4 GHz. You want no more than 12 dB of feedline loss. There are two connectors totaling 1 dB, and you keep 3 dB of margin. The remaining budget is 12 − 1 − 3 = 8 dB. Distance is L = (8 / 22.3) × 100 m ≈ 36 m. With a velocity factor near 0.85, delay is about 0.14 µs. What this means: Keep the LMR‑400 run to roughly 36 m to stay within your loss target.
Limits of the Coaxial Cable Distance Approach
Every model simplifies reality. A distance calculator assumes reliable attenuation data and stable conditions. Real installations add temperature swings, moisture, sharp bends, and aging. These factors increase loss and can change impedance mismatch.
- Frequency dependency: α(f) is not flat; it typically grows with frequency.
- Temperature and moisture: Dielectric losses rise with heat and humidity.
- Connector quality: Poor terminations add hidden loss and reflections.
- Mismatch effects: Return loss and VSWR reduce delivered power.
- Equalization and amplifiers: Active devices can extend distance beyond passive limits.
Use a conservative margin when results are tight. If the calculator says you are close to the limit, consider a lower‑loss cable, fewer connectors, or an amplifier. For critical links, measure attenuation on the installed run to verify the model.
Units Reference
Getting units right keeps your variables consistent and the result meaningful. Many coax specs are in dB per 100 m, while some teams think in feet. The calculator converts behind the scenes, but it helps to know what each unit means.
| Symbol | Quantity | Typical Units | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| dB | Insertion loss | dB | Ratio unit; add/subtract across components |
| dBm | Power level | dBm | Used to compute allowed loss from TX/RX |
| f | Frequency | MHz, GHz | Loss increases with frequency |
| L | Length | m, ft | Enter your preferred units; tool converts |
| VF | Velocity factor | ratio (0–1) | Used in propagation delay calculation |
| t | Delay | ns, µs | t = L / (c × VF) |
Read the table left to right when checking your inputs. For example, if attenuation is listed as 22 dB/100 m at 2.4 GHz, divide by 100 to get dB per meter. If you switch to feet, the calculator will convert units for you to keep the math correct.
Common Issues & Fixes
Most surprises come from using the wrong attenuation figure or mixing units. Another frequent issue is ignoring fixed losses in adapters and splitters. Small errors add up on long runs.
- Problem: Using α at the wrong frequency. Fix: Always match α(f) to your operating band.
- Problem: Forgetting connector losses. Fix: Add 0.3–0.7 dB per connector, per datasheet.
- Problem: No safety margin. Fix: Reserve 2–6 dB depending on environment and length.
- Problem: Feet vs meters mix-up. Fix: Let the Calculator handle conversions and double-check units.
- Problem: Old or waterlogged cable. Fix: Increase margin or replace cable; published α may be too low.
If your computed distance is too short, consider a lower‑loss cable, fewer connectors, or moving the active device closer. For digital video or high‑speed data, check if equalizers or repeaters are available for your format.
FAQ about Coaxial Cable Distance Calculator
Do I need transmitter and receiver levels to use the tool?
No. You can enter an allowed insertion loss directly. If you do have TX and RX levels, the Calculator converts them into the allowed loss for you.
Which attenuation number should I use from the datasheet?
Use the attenuation at your operating frequency. If the table lists values at fixed points, choose the closest frequency or use the manufacturer’s curve to interpolate.
How accurate is the distance result?
It is as accurate as the input data and your margin. With good inputs and a 3–6 dB margin, the result is typically reliable for planning and procurement.
Can the calculator handle different units like feet and meters?
Yes. Enter any supported units for length and frequency. The tool converts internally to keep the equations consistent and returns the result in your chosen units.
Key Terms in Coaxial Cable Distance
Attenuation
Signal loss in the cable, usually expressed in dB per unit length at a specific frequency. It increases with frequency and temperature.
Link Budget
The total allowable loss between a transmitter and a receiver, including cable and component losses, while still meeting performance targets.
Velocity Factor
The fraction of the speed of light at which signals travel in the cable dielectric. It determines propagation delay for a given length.
Insertion Loss
The reduction in signal power due to inserting a component or a cable into the path. The calculator reports it in dB.
Return Loss
A measure of mismatch between components and the cable. Poor return loss causes reflections and reduces delivered power.
Impedance
The characteristic resistance of a cable, typically 50 Ω or 75 Ω. Matching impedance minimizes reflections and loss.
Margin
An extra allowance in dB to cover uncertainties such as heat, moisture, bending, and manufacturing variation.
Splitter Loss
The signal reduction caused by a splitter or tap, expressed in dB. This is a fixed loss that subtracts from your budget.
References
Here’s a concise overview before we dive into the key points:
- Times Microwave LMR‑400 product page with attenuation and specifications
- Belden 1694A 75 Ω digital video coax cable specifications
- Wikipedia: Coaxial cable fundamentals, construction, and applications
- NI: Understanding Decibels (dB) and dBm
- RF Cafe: Coax cable attenuation charts across frequency
These points provide quick orientation—use them alongside the full explanations in this page.
References
- International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
- International Commission on Illumination (CIE)
- NIST Photometry
- ISO Standards — Light & Radiation