Types of Coaxial Cable: RG6, RG59, RG11, RG58, 50 Ohm and 75 Ohm Explained

coaxial cables are not all the same. The right coax cable depends on impedance, cable size, shielding, connector type, signal frequency, installation environment, and the equipment you are connecting. If you are still identifying the cable physically, start with the guide on what a coax cable looks like.

For most home TV, satellite, antenna, and cable internet installations, the common choice is 75-ohm RG6 coaxial cable. For radio, RF antennas, wireless systems, and test equipment, 50-ohm coaxial cables such as RG58, RG8, RG213, and RG174 are common.

This guide compares the main types of coaxial cable and explains when to use each one.

How Coaxial Cables Are Classified

Coaxial cables are usually classified by several factors:

Classification What It Means
RG number A common cable type name, such as RG6, RG59, RG11, or RG58
Impedance Usually 50 ohm or 75 ohm
Diameter Affects flexibility, connector fit, and signal loss
Shielding Single, dual, tri-shield, or quad-shield construction
Jacket rating Indoor, outdoor, plenum, riser, or direct-burial
Connector type F-type, BNC, SMA, N-type, RCA, or others
Application TV, internet, antenna, RF, radio, CCTV, or test equipment

The RG number is useful, but it is not enough by itself. Two cables sold as RG6 can differ in shielding, conductor material, jacket type, and attenuation. For critical installations, always check the datasheet.

Fact-Checked Notes Before Choosing a Cable

Many online coaxial cable guides oversimplify the topic by saying “RG6 is better” or “thicker cable is better.” That is not always true. A better rule is to match the cable to the signal system.

Decision Point Why It Matters
Impedance first TV, satellite, video, and cable internet usually use 75-ohm coax; RF and radio equipment often use 50-ohm coax
Frequency and distance Higher frequencies and longer runs increase loss, so cable attenuation matters
Connector fit RG6, RG59, RG11, and RG58 often need different connector sizes
Shielding Shielding affects interference resistance and signal leakage
Jacket rating Outdoor, plenum, riser, and direct-burial use cases require different cable jackets
Service provider rules Cable internet and satellite providers may specify cable and connector requirements

This article uses approximate sizes because coaxial cable dimensions vary by manufacturer and construction. RG designations are widely used commercially, but they are not a guarantee that every product with the same RG label has identical electrical performance. For size-first selection, use the coax cable sizes and diameter chart.

75 Ohm Coaxial Cable Types

75-ohm coaxial cable is common for TV, video, cable internet, satellite, and antenna systems. If your use case is home entertainment or cable broadband, you are usually looking at a 75-ohm cable.

RG6

RG6 is the standard coaxial cable for most modern home TV and cable internet setups. It is used for cable TV, satellite TV, over-the-air antennas, and cable modems.

Feature RG6
Impedance 75 ohm
Approx. diameter 6.9 mm / 0.27 in
Common connector F-type
Best for TV, satellite, antenna, cable modem
Main advantage Good balance of availability, loss performance, and installation ease

Choose RG6 for most new residential coax installations.

RG59

RG59 is an older 75-ohm coaxial cable often used for analog video, CCTV, and short low-frequency runs. It is thinner than RG6, but it usually has higher loss at modern TV, satellite, and broadband frequencies.

Feature RG59
Impedance 75 ohm
Approx. diameter 6.1 mm / 0.24 in
Common connector BNC, RCA, F-type
Best for Legacy video, CCTV, short analog runs
Main limitation More loss than RG6 at higher frequencies

RG59 can still work in some short analog video systems, but RG6 is usually better for modern TV and internet.

RG11

RG11 is a larger 75-ohm coaxial cable used for longer runs where lower signal loss is important. It is thicker and less flexible than RG6.

Feature RG11
Impedance 75 ohm
Approx. diameter 10.3 mm / 0.40 in
Common connector F-type
Best for Long TV, satellite, cable, or outdoor distribution runs
Main limitation Harder to bend, route, and terminate

Use RG11 for long runs, not for short patch cables behind a TV or modem.

50 Ohm Coaxial Cable Types

50-ohm coaxial cable is common in RF, radio, wireless, test, measurement, and antenna systems. If your equipment has BNC, SMA, N-type, or similar RF connectors, it may require 50-ohm coax.

RG58

RG58 is a flexible 50-ohm coaxial cable often used for short RF connections, radio equipment, lab test leads, and older 10BASE2 thin Ethernet systems.

Feature RG58
Impedance 50 ohm
Approx. diameter 5.0 mm / 0.20 in
Common connector BNC, SMA, N-type, UHF
Best for Short RF cables, radio, test equipment
Main limitation Higher loss than larger RF coax over distance

RG58 is convenient for short runs, but it is not ideal for long high-frequency antenna feeds.

RG8

RG8 is a larger 50-ohm coaxial cable used in RF and amateur radio applications. Compared with RG58, it generally offers lower loss but is thicker and less flexible.

Feature RG8
Impedance 50 ohm
Approx. diameter 10.3 mm / 0.40 in
Best for RF transmission, amateur radio, longer antenna runs
Main advantage Lower loss than smaller 50-ohm coax

RG213

RG213 is a durable 50-ohm coaxial cable used for radio and RF transmission systems. It is commonly selected when a rugged cable is needed.

Feature RG213
Impedance 50 ohm
Approx. diameter 10.3 mm / 0.40 in
Best for RF transmission, radio systems, antenna feed lines
Main advantage Durable construction and lower loss than small coax

RG174

RG174 is a small, flexible 50-ohm coaxial cable often used for short RF pigtails inside devices or near small antennas.

Feature RG174
Impedance 50 ohm
Approx. diameter 2.5 mm / 0.10 in
Best for Small RF pigtails, internal wiring, compact antenna leads
Main limitation High loss, especially at higher frequencies

Use RG174 only for short connections where flexibility and small size matter more than low loss.

Coaxial Cable Type Comparison Table

Cable Type Impedance Approx. Diameter Common Use Best Choice For
RG6 75 ohm 6.9 mm / 0.27 in TV, satellite, cable internet Most home TV and modem connections
RG59 75 ohm 6.1 mm / 0.24 in Analog video, CCTV Short legacy video runs
RG11 75 ohm 10.3 mm / 0.40 in Long TV/cable runs Lower loss over long distance
RG58 50 ohm 5.0 mm / 0.20 in RF, radio, test leads Short 50-ohm RF connections
RG8 50 ohm 10.3 mm / 0.40 in RF transmission Longer RF and radio runs
RG213 50 ohm 10.3 mm / 0.40 in RF transmission Durable radio feed lines
RG174 50 ohm 2.5 mm / 0.10 in RF pigtails Short compact antenna leads

Flexible, Semi-Rigid, and Hardline Coax

Besides RG type, coaxial cables can also be grouped by mechanical construction.

Construction Description Common Use
Flexible coax Bendable cable with braided or foil shielding Home TV, RF patch cables, antennas
Semi-rigid coax Holds shape after bending, often with solid outer conductor RF modules, microwave systems, test setups
Hardline coax Large rigid or semi-rigid cable for low loss and high power Broadcast, telecom, high-power RF
Micro coax Very small coaxial cable Cameras, laptops, phones, compact electronics

Home users usually deal with flexible coax. RF engineers and equipment manufacturers may use semi-rigid or micro coax depending on the design.

Shielding Types

Shielding helps reduce interference and signal leakage. Common shield styles include:

Shield Type Description
Single shield Basic braid or foil protection
Dual shield Foil plus braid, common in many RG6 cables
Tri-shield Additional shielding layer for better isolation
Quad-shield Four shield layers, useful in noisy environments

Quad-shield RG6 can be useful for cable TV, satellite, and broadband installations in areas with interference, but it also requires connectors designed for the larger shielded cable.

Which Coaxial Cable Type Should You Use?

Scenario Recommended Coax
Cable TV RG6 75-ohm
Cable modem internet RG6 75-ohm
TV antenna RG6 75-ohm
Long outdoor TV or satellite run RG11 75-ohm
Older CCTV or analog video RG59 75-ohm
Radio equipment 50-ohm coax specified by the equipment
Short RF test lead RG58 or another 50-ohm test cable
Long RF antenna feed Larger low-loss 50-ohm coax such as RG8 or RG213
Small internal antenna lead RG174 or similar micro coax

The safest rule is simple: match the cable impedance and connector type to the equipment.

Practical Buying Checklist

Before ordering coaxial cable, verify these details:

  1. The required impedance: 50 ohm or 75 ohm
  2. The connector type and connector size
  3. The cable run length
  4. Whether the cable is indoor, outdoor, plenum, riser, or direct-burial
  5. The frequency range of the system
  6. Whether solid copper or copper-clad steel is required
  7. Whether the cable will carry power, such as satellite LNB power or antenna amplifier power
  8. Whether the installation needs quad shielding or standard shielding

For example, a short cable from a wall outlet to a cable modem is usually a different buying decision from a long outdoor antenna feed or a 50-ohm RF test cable. If the same installation also involves Ethernet or MoCA adapters, compare the signal path in the coaxial cable vs Ethernet cable guide.

FAQ

What are the main types of coaxial cable?

The main coaxial cable types include RG6, RG59, RG11, RG58, RG8, RG213, and RG174. RG6, RG59, and RG11 are usually 75-ohm cables. RG58, RG8, RG213, and RG174 are commonly 50-ohm RF cables.

What coaxial cable is best for TV?

RG6 75-ohm coaxial cable with F-type connectors is the best general choice for modern TV, cable box, satellite, and antenna connections.

What coaxial cable is best for internet?

Cable internet usually uses RG6 75-ohm coaxial cable from the wall outlet to the cable modem.

Is RG6 better than RG59?

For modern TV, satellite, antenna, and cable internet, RG6 is usually better because it generally has lower high-frequency loss. RG59 is more common in older analog video and CCTV systems.

What is RG11 used for?

RG11 is used for long 75-ohm coaxial runs where lower signal loss matters. It is thicker and less flexible than RG6.

What is 50-ohm coax used for?

50-ohm coax is used for RF, radio, wireless, antenna, and test equipment. Common examples include RG58, RG8, RG213, and RG174.

Can I mix 50-ohm and 75-ohm coax?

It is usually best not to mix them unless the equipment documentation allows it. Impedance mismatch can cause reflections, signal loss, and measurement errors.

For the full overview, see the main guide: Coaxial Cable Guide: Types, Uses, Sizes, TV Connections, and Ethernet Adapters Explained.

MOZ Official Authors
MOZ Official Authors

MOZ Official Authors is a collective of engineers, product specialists, and industry professionals from MOZ Electronics. With deep expertise in electronic components, semiconductor sourcing, and supply chain solutions, the team shares practical insights, technical knowledge, and market perspectives for engineers, OEMs, and procurement professionals worldwide. Their articles focus on component selection, industry trends, application guidance, and sourcing strategies, helping customers make informed decisions and accelerate product development.

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