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According to my old copy of the Times Fiber Communications, Inc.

, "RF Transmission Line Catalog & Handabook", RG-223 has identical power and loss characteristics, to RG-55 and RG-55A. Its loss and power handling is very slightly better than RG-58, and is useable up to 10,000 MHz. The main physical difference is that it is double shielded. As a result, outer diameter is slightly greater than RG-58. According to the reference, all RG-58 doesn't have the same impedance! RG-58(plain), has Z=53.5 ohms. RG-58A has Z=52.0 ohms. RG-58B has Z=53.5 ohms. RG-58C has Z=50.0 ohms. In addition, RG-58 and RG-58B have a solid center conductor, while RG-58A and RG-58C have a stranded center conductor. RG-58C is the closest match to RG-223, which has Z=50.0 ohms, and uses the same outer jacket material.

I'd expect slightly lower loss in the 223 because its inner conductor is solid instead of stranded, and because it's silver plated instead of tinned. For a discussion about how the stranded center conductor increases loss, see "RF Design" magazine of a bit over a year ago for an article, I think written by a fellow from Andrews Cable. It's a smallpercentage effect.

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