1.13 coaxial cable

Quick Reference

Impedance 50 Ohm
Frequency Range DC – 6 GHz
Outer Diameter 1.13MM
Velocity Factor 70%
Capacitance 28.5 pF/ft
Max Voltage 335 VRMS
Dielectric PTFE
Shield Silver-plated copper braid
Jacket PTFE
Min Bend Radius 0.12 in (3mm)
Weight 0.3 lb/100ft
Temp Range -40°C to +165°C
Center Conductor Silver-plated copper clad steel, 0.28mm

1.13 Coaxial Cable

50 Ohm • DC – 6 GHz

1.13mm coaxial cable is an ultra-miniature 50-ohm cable used primarily for internal RF wiring in compact wireless devices such as laptops, tablets, and embedded modules. Its extremely small 1.13mm outer diameter allows it to pass through tight spaces inside consumer electronics, connecting antennas to WiFi or cellular modules with minimal signal loss over short distances.

1.13 Attenuation

Signal loss in dB per 100 ft at standard RF frequencies.

Frequency Loss / 100 ft Loss / ft 6 ft
100 MHz 8.5 dB 0.085 dB 0.51 dB
450 MHz 18 dB 0.18 dB 1.08 dB
900 MHz 26 dB 0.26 dB 1.56 dB
1.8 GHz 38 dB 0.38 dB 2.28 dB
2.4 GHz 44 dB 0.44 dB 2.64 dB
5.8 GHz 72 dB 0.72 dB 4.32 dB

1.13 Power Handling

Approximate maximum continuous power (CW) at 25°C ambient.

Frequency Max Power (W)
100 MHz 25 W
450 MHz 12 W
900 MHz 8 W
1.8 GHz 5 W
2.4 GHz 4 W
5.8 GHz 2 W

Construction & Materials

Center Conductor

Silver-plated copper clad steel, 0.28mm

The center conductor carries the RF signal. Material and diameter affect DC resistance, skin effect losses, and overall attenuation.

Dielectric

PTFE

The dielectric insulator separates the center conductor from the shield. PTFE dielectrics offer superior temperature stability and lower loss versus polyethylene.

Shield

Silver-plated copper braid

The outer conductor provides the return path and shields the signal from external interference. More braid coverage means better EMI rejection.

Jacket

PTFE

The outer jacket protects the cable from physical damage, UV, chemicals, and moisture. PTFE and FEP jackets handle higher temperatures than PVC.

Velocity Factor

70% (c)

How fast the signal travels relative to the speed of light in vacuum. Higher velocity factor means shorter electrical wavelength per foot — important for phased array and delay-matched applications.

Max Voltage

335 VRMS

The maximum continuous operating voltage. Exceeding this can cause dielectric breakdown. Relevant for high-power transmitters and pulse applications.

Available 1.13 Assemblies

Choose a connector combination to see pricing and order. All assemblies are hand-built and ship free within the USA.

135 more configurations available on the 1.13 page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the impedance of 1.13?

1.13 is a 50 Ohm coaxial cable. All standard RF systems (antennas, transceivers, test equipment) use 50-ohm impedance, so 1.13 connects directly without any matching network.

What frequency range does 1.13 support?

1.13 is rated DC – 6 GHz. At higher frequencies, the attenuation per foot increases, so actual usable range depends on acceptable signal loss for your application.

How much signal loss does 1.13 have?

1.13 has 8.5 dB of attenuation per 100 ft at 100 MHz, rising to 72 dB per 100 ft at 5.8 GHz. Use the attenuation table above to calculate loss for any specific length and frequency.

Why does 1.13 use PTFE?

PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) offers exceptionally low dielectric loss, excellent chemical resistance, and a wide temperature range compared to standard polyethylene. It allows 1.13 to maintain stable electrical performance in harsh environments, including high humidity, chemical exposure, and temperatures up to +200°C.

Are CoaxRF 1.13 cable assemblies made in the USA?

Yes. Every 1.13 assembly is hand-terminated and continuity tested at our US facility. We build each cable to order — nothing is pre-made or drop-shipped from overseas.

Can I order a custom length of 1.13?

Yes. In addition to our standard lengths (1, 6, 25, 50, 100 ft and longer), we accept custom-length orders through the Cable Builder. Custom assemblies ship within 1–2 business days.