Episode #445

The Long Reach: Solving the PC Cable Length Dilemma

Can you move your PC to another room? Herman and Corn explore the limits of USB, HDMI, and power cables for the ultimate silent workspace.

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The dream of a perfectly silent, minimalist workstation is one shared by many power users. Imagine a desk consisting of nothing but sleek monitors, a keyboard, and a mouse, while the bulky, heat-spewing computer tower hums away in a distant closet or an adjacent room. In this episode, Herman Poppleberry and Corn discuss the practical hurdles of achieving this "remote PC" vision, sparked by their housemate Daniel’s attempt to optimize his home office. While the aesthetic appeal is undeniable, the transition from a local to a remote setup is often thwarted by the uncompromising laws of physics and the strict specifications of modern data protocols.

The Physics of Signal Integrity

Herman begins the discussion by explaining why cables have length limits at all. As an electrical signal travels through a copper wire, it encounters resistance and capacitance, leading to attenuation—the weakening of the signal. Furthermore, at high data rates, timing becomes critical. If a signal "smears" or arrives slightly out of sync due to the distance traveled, the receiving device (like a monitor or a hard drive) will perceive only noise. As we demand higher resolutions and faster data speeds, the "leash" on our cables actually gets shorter. What worked for a 1080p monitor ten years ago will likely fail for a 4K high-refresh-rate setup today.

The USB Bottleneck: Copper vs. Fiber

The conversation first turns to USB connectivity. Daniel’s setup requires moving a USB 3.0 optical media drive and various peripherals. Herman points out that for a standard "passive" USB 3.0 cable—one that is just wire and plastic—the official limit is roughly three meters (about ten feet). Beyond this, the signal degrades so significantly that devices may fail to connect or drop down to sluggish USB 2.0 speeds.

To go further, users must look toward "active" cables, which contain small chips that act as signal repeaters. These can push the distance to five or ten meters. However, for a truly remote setup in another room, Herman recommends Fiber Optic USB cables. By converting electrical signals into light, these cables bypass the limitations of copper, allowing for runs of 30 to 50 meters without any loss in speed. While more expensive, fiber is the only reliable way to maintain a high-speed data link over significant distances.

The Display Dilemma: HDMI and DVI

The hosts then tackle the complexity of video cables. Daniel’s setup involves a mix of legacy and modern monitors, including DVI and HDMI. Herman explains that DVI is surprisingly resilient for lower resolutions, often reaching five meters before "sparklies"—digital noise caused by bit errors—appear on the screen. However, for modern HDMI standards, the situation is more volatile.

While a high-quality passive HDMI cable might handle a 1080p signal at 15 meters, the bandwidth requirements for HDMI 2.1 (4K at 120Hz or 8K) are so high that passive cables often fail after just three meters. For Daniel to move his PC ten meters away, Herman suggests Active Optical Cables (AOC). These hybrid cables use fiber optics for the high-speed data and copper for the handshake signals, making them immune to the electromagnetic interference that occurs when multiple cables are bundled together in a wall.

The Complexity of USB-C and Thunderbolt

One of the most requested features for modern desks is a single-cable solution via USB-C or Thunderbolt. These cables can theoretically carry video, high-speed data, and Power Delivery (PD) to charge a laptop. However, Herman warns that this is the most difficult signal to "stretch." A passive USB-C cable supporting full 10Gbps data and video is usually limited to just one or two meters.

While optical Thunderbolt cables exist and can reach impressive lengths, they typically lose the ability to carry power. This means that while the data and video will reach the monitor in another room, the monitor (or a docked laptop) will still require its own local power source. The "one cable to rule them all" dream becomes much harder to maintain once you pass the six-foot mark.

Power Cables: Safety and Voltage Drop

Finally, Corn and Herman address the often-overlooked power cable. Daniel inquired about using long C13/C14 extensions (commonly used with UPS systems). Herman notes that while you can buy long power cords, the "gauge" or thickness of the wire is vital. In regions with 110-120V power, a thin 18-gauge wire over a long distance can cause a voltage drop, forcing the PC’s power supply to work harder and potentially creating a fire hazard as the wire heats up.

The rule of thumb for power is to keep cables as short as possible. If a long run is necessary, users must switch to a thicker 14-gauge or 12-gauge wire to minimize resistance. Herman notes that their location in Jerusalem, which uses 230V, offers a slight advantage because higher voltage results in lower current and less voltage drop, but the safety principles remain the same.

Conclusion: The Shopping List for a Remote PC

To wrap up the episode, Herman and Corn synthesize their advice for anyone looking to follow in Daniel’s footsteps. For a PC located roughly ten meters (33 feet) away, the solution isn't found in the bargain bin. It requires a specialized "shopping list" of active optical cables for HDMI and USB, a transition away from legacy DVI where possible, and a heavy-duty, low-gauge power solution. By understanding the physical limits of these cables, users can build a silent, high-performance workspace that looks like magic but is grounded in solid engineering.

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Episode #445: The Long Reach: Solving the PC Cable Length Dilemma

Corn
So Herman, our housemate Daniel is at it again. He is moving things around in the house, trying to optimize his workspace, and he has this vision of a silent, minimalist desk where the actual computer is tucked away in another room entirely.
Herman
Herman Poppleberry here, and I have to say, I love that vision. There is something incredibly satisfying about a workstation that is just monitors and peripherals, with all the heat and fan noise from the desktop tower happening somewhere else. But, as Daniel is finding out, the laws of physics and the specifications of modern cables have some very strong opinions about how far you can actually pull that off.
Corn
It is the classic struggle between aesthetics and signal integrity. He sent us this prompt asking about the maximum lengths for basically every cable sticking out of a modern PC. USB, HDMI, DVI, even the power cables. And honestly, it is a great question because what worked for a ten eighty p monitor ten years ago definitely does not work for a high refresh rate four k setup today.
Herman
Exactly. The more data we try to shove through these copper wires, the shorter the leash gets. It is all about attenuation and timing. As the signal travels, it gets weaker and the timing gets fuzzy. At a certain point, the receiving end just sees noise. So, where should we start? Should we dive into the USB side of things first?
Corn
Let us do it. Daniel specifically mentioned USB three, going from USB-A to USB-C, and he mentioned an optical media drive. He rarely uses it, so he wants it out of sight. What is the limit there for a standard cable?
Herman
For a passive USB three point zero or three point one cable, the official specification is actually surprisingly short. You are looking at about three meters, which is roughly ten feet. If you go beyond that with a standard copper cable, the signal degradation usually leads to the device either not being recognized at all or dropping down to USB two point zero speeds, which would be a nightmare for an optical drive or a fast external hard drive.
Corn
Three meters is not much if you are trying to put the computer in a different room. That basically gets you across a large desk and down to the floor. If Daniel wants that drive in a closet or across the hallway, he is going to hit a wall immediately.
Herman
Right. And this is where we have to distinguish between passive and active cables. A passive cable is just wire and plastic. An active cable has a little chip inside, usually at one or both ends, that acts as a signal repeater. It takes the weakening signal and boosts it. With active USB cables, you can reliably get to five meters or even ten meters. But even then, you are still dealing with copper, which has its limits.
Corn
What about the newer stuff? I know we talked about the USB-C revolution back in episode seventy-seven. Has the transition to USB-C changed the distance game for standard peripherals?
Herman
It has actually made it harder in some ways. Because USB-C supports much higher data rates, like ten or twenty gigabits per second, the cables have to be even higher quality. If you want full ten gigabit speeds on a passive USB-C to USB-C cable, you are often limited to just one meter. If you are okay with slower speeds, you can get longer ones, but for Daniel's remote setup, he really needs to look into fiber optic USB cables.
Corn
Fiber optic? That sounds expensive for a disk drive.
Herman
It is more expensive than a five dollar cable from the corner store, for sure. But fiber optic USB cables convert the electrical signal into light. Light does not suffer from the same attenuation issues as electricity over copper. You can get fiber optic USB three cables that are fifteen, thirty, or even fifty meters long. If Daniel is serious about putting the PC in a completely different part of the house, fiber is the only way to ensure his peripherals actually work at full speed.
Corn
That is fascinating. So the limit is not really the protocol, it is the medium. If you use light, you can go as far as you want, within reason. But let us talk about the monitors, because that is the big one. Daniel has three monitors. One is HDMI and one is DVI. He is worried about the DVI because it feels like a legacy format. Is he right to be worried?
Herman
DVI is an interesting one. It is essentially the grandfather of HDMI. For a single link DVI cable, which handles resolutions up to nineteen twenty by twelve hundred, you can actually go quite far, maybe five meters or fifteen feet without any extra help. If you have a high quality cable, some people push it to ten meters, but you start seeing what we call sparklies on the screen. Little white pixels flickering because the data is getting corrupted.
Corn
I remember those sparklies from our old gaming setups. It looks like digital snow. What about dual link DVI? Daniel might be using that for a higher resolution or refresh rate on an older monitor.
Herman
Dual link DVI is even more sensitive. Because it uses more pins and higher frequencies to get more data across, the reliable limit stays around five meters. If he needs to go further with DVI, he is better off using a DVI to HDMI adapter and then using a long HDMI cable, because the HDMI ecosystem has better long distance solutions.
Corn
Okay, so let us move to HDMI then. Most people think HDMI can go forever, but I have tried those twenty foot cables from the bargain bin and they are hit or miss. What is the actual standard?
Herman
It depends entirely on the version of HDMI and the resolution you are pushing. If you are just doing ten eighty p at sixty hertz, a good passive HDMI cable can go up to fifteen meters, which is about fifty feet. That is actually quite a long run. But, and this is a big but, if Daniel is running a four k monitor at sixty hertz, or heaven forbid a high refresh rate gaming monitor at four k, that distance drops off a cliff.
Corn
Because of the bandwidth, right? HDMI two point one needs forty eight gigabits per second.
Herman
Exactly. For HDMI two point one, a passive cable is usually maxed out at about three meters. Anything longer and you will get signal dropouts, or the screen will just stay black. For Daniel's three monitor setup, if he is using modern high resolution screens, he is going to need Active Optical Cables, or AOC, for the HDMI runs too.
Corn
We actually touched on some of the complexities of driving multiple high resolution displays in episode two hundred twenty one, when we were looking at those massive mission control style setups. One thing I remember from that discussion was that the more screens you add, the more you have to worry about the total signal load and interference if all those cables are bundled together.
Herman
That is a great point, Corn. If Daniel runs three or four long cables through a single hole in the wall, they can actually interfere with each other if they are not shielded properly. But the AOC cables I mentioned are great for this because fiber optics are immune to electromagnetic interference. He could bundle ten of them together and they would not bother each other at all.
Corn
So for the displays, the takeaway is that old tech like DVI is actually okay for medium distances at low resolution, but for the modern stuff, he is looking at active or optical cables if he wants to go beyond ten feet. Now, what about the third monitor? He mentioned USB-C to USB-C monitor connections. This is becoming the standard for laptops and some high end desktops. Can you run a monitor over a long USB-C cable?
Herman
This is where it gets really tricky and where most people get frustrated. When you run a monitor over USB-C, you are usually using something called DisplayPort Alt Mode. This means the USB-C cable is carrying both high speed data for any USB ports on the monitor and the video signal itself.
Corn
And often power too, right? Power Delivery to charge a laptop?
Herman
Exactly. Doing all three of those things at once over a long distance is incredibly difficult. For a passive USB-C cable that supports video and high speed data, you are generally limited to one or maybe two meters. If you find a five meter USB-C cable that claims to do it all for twenty dollars, it is probably lying or it will only work at very low resolutions.
Corn
So if he wants his third monitor to be connected via USB-C from a PC in another room, he is essentially looking at an active Thunderbolt cable or a very specific active USB-C cable.
Herman
Yes, and active Thunderbolt four cables are fantastic, but they are expensive and usually max out at about two meters for copper. If he needs to go further, there are optical Thunderbolt cables, but they are very pricey and they usually do not carry power. So he could get the video and data to the monitor thirty meters away, but he would still need to plug the monitor into its own power outlet. It would not be a single cable solution for power.
Corn
Which leads us perfectly into his next question. The power cables. He mentioned the IEC C thirteen to C fourteen cables. He called them Mickey Mouse cables, though I think he might be mixing them up with the smaller C five connectors that actually look like Mickey Mouse ears. The C thirteen is the standard trapezoidal one you see on the back of every desktop power supply.
Herman
Right, the C thirteen is the female end that goes into the computer, and the C fourteen is the male end. If he is using a UPS, an Uninterruptible Power Supply, he might be using a C thirteen to C fourteen extension to get power from the UPS to the computer.
Corn
So how long can those be? Can he just buy a fifty foot power extension cord and call it a day?
Herman
Technically, you can, but you have to be very careful about the gauge of the wire. This is something people often overlook. In the United States and other regions with lower voltage like one hundred ten or one hundred twenty volts, the current is higher for the same amount of power. If you have a long, thin wire, you get a voltage drop. The wire itself has resistance, and that resistance turns some of that electricity into heat.
Corn
And if the voltage drops too much, the power supply in the computer has to work harder to compensate, or it might just shut down if it hits an under voltage protection limit.
Herman
Exactly. For a standard desktop PC that might pull five hundred to eight hundred watts under load, you really do not want to go beyond maybe fifteen or twenty feet with a standard eighteen gauge power cord. If Daniel wants to go further, he needs to look for a fourteen gauge or even a twelve gauge cord. The lower the gauge number, the thicker the wire and the less resistance it has.
Corn
It is funny how we worry so much about the data cables, but the power cable is arguably the most dangerous if you get it wrong. A hot power cable in a wall is a fire hazard.
Herman
It really is. And since Daniel is here in Jerusalem with us, we are on two hundred thirty volts. That actually helps a bit because higher voltage means lower current for the same wattage, which results in less voltage drop over distance. But the rule of thumb remains: keep power cables as short as possible, and if you must go long, go thick.
Corn
So let us synthesize this for him. If he is setting up this remote workstation, he is looking at a bundle of cables. Let us say he wants the computer ten meters away, which is about thirty three feet. That is a pretty standard distance for going to an adjacent room or a closet.
Herman
For ten meters, here is the shopping list. For the USB three point zero peripherals, he needs an active extension cable or a fiber optic USB cable. For the HDMI monitor, he definitely needs an Active Optical Cable. For the DVI monitor, he should probably get a DVI to HDMI adapter and run a second optical HDMI cable. For the USB-C monitor, he is likely going to have to give up on the single cable dream and run a separate display cable and a separate USB data cable to the monitor's hub.
Corn
And for the power, he should probably keep the UPS near the computer itself, rather than near the desk, and just run a high quality, thick gauge extension cord if he absolutely has to. But ideally, the computer and its power source should stay together.
Herman
I agree. It is much better to have the long runs be data and video rather than high current power. One thing Daniel mentioned at the end of his prompt was wake on lan and shut on lan. This is a brilliant addition to a remote setup.
Corn
Yeah, explain that for those who might not have heard of it. If the computer is in another room, how do you even turn it on?
Herman
Wake on lan is a protocol that allows a computer to be turned on by a network message. So Daniel could actually use his phone or a small button on his desk that is connected to the network to send a magic packet to the PC in the other room. It tells the motherboard to wake up. It is way more elegant than running a separate long wire just for the power button, although you can actually do that too with a simple two lead wire.
Corn
I have seen those remote power buttons. They are just a physical switch on a long cord that plugs into the power jumper on the motherboard. It is a bit low tech, but it works every time. No magic packets required.
Herman
True, but Daniel is a techie, he will probably go for the network solution. Now, there is one more thing we should mention for anyone thinking about this kind of setup, and that is latency. Even though light travels fast, active electronics and signal conversion can add a tiny bit of delay.
Corn
Is it noticeable? We are talking about milliseconds, right?
Herman
For most people, no. But if you are a competitive gamer or doing high end video editing where you need frame perfect precision, you might feel a tiny bit of lag if you are using lower quality active converters. This is why we always recommend the fiber optic versions for video. They have almost zero added latency compared to some of the cheaper electronic repeaters that have to process the signal.
Corn
That makes sense. It is all about maintaining that high speed highway without any toll booths along the way. I am curious, Herman, do you think we will ever get to a point where we do not need these physical cables? Like, could Daniel do this whole thing wirelessly in twenty twenty six?
Herman
We are getting closer, but we are not there yet for a primary workstation. Technologies like Wi-Fi seven have incredible bandwidth, but they still struggle with the consistency needed for a display. If a single packet drops on your video stream, the screen flickers. That is fine for a movie, but it is infuriating when you are trying to work. We talked about some of the future proofing for home networks in episode one sixty nine, and even then, we concluded that for high bandwidth, low latency stuff, copper or fiber is still king.
Corn
It always comes back to the physical connection. There is just no substitute for a dedicated pipe for your data. So, looking at Daniel's specific setup, he has this optical drive. Most people might say, why even bother with a physical drive in this day and age? But if he is doing high quality archival work or listening to lossless audio from his old CD collection, that USB three point zero connection really matters.
Herman
It does. And those optical drives are surprisingly sensitive to power fluctuations too. If he uses a long, cheap USB cable, the drive might have enough power to spin up, but then fail when it tries to move the laser assembly. That is another reason to go with an active cable that has its own power injection if possible.
Corn
This whole discussion really highlights how much we take for granted when our computer is sitting right under our desk. Everything is designed for that three to six foot range. Once you step outside that bubble, you are essentially entering the world of industrial AV or professional server room management.
Herman
It is a different world, for sure. But it is a fun one to play in. There is a certain magic to sitting at a desk that is completely silent and cool, knowing there is a powerful machine doing all the heavy lifting in a different room. It feels like the future.
Corn
It definitely does. And for Daniel, it is about creating that perfect environment in our house. I think he can do it, but he just needs to be prepared for the cable budget to be a bit higher than he initially thought. Those optical cables are not cheap.
Herman
No, they are not. But they are a one time investment. A good fiber optic HDMI cable will last him through several computer upgrades.
Corn
That is a good way to look at it. It is infrastructure, not just an accessory. Well, I think we have covered the bases for him. USB three has a three meter passive limit, HDMI and DVI are around five to fifteen meters depending on resolution, and USB-C is the shortest of all at about one meter for full speed. Anything beyond that, and you are looking at active or optical solutions.
Herman
And do not forget the power cables. Keep them thick and keep the runs as short as you can. Safety first, even in a high tech house.
Corn
Exactly. Well, this has been a great deep dive. It is one of those topics that seems simple until you actually try to plug everything in and nothing works. Hopefully, this saves Daniel and our listeners some frustration.
Herman
I hope so too. It is all about knowing the limits of your gear before you start drilling holes in the walls.
Corn
Definitely. And hey, if you are listening and you have done a remote PC setup like this, we would love to hear how you handled the cable management and if you found any specific brands that worked well for those long runs. You can always reach out to us through the contact form at myweirdprompts.com.
Herman
And if you found this episode helpful, or if you have been enjoying the show for a while, we would really appreciate it if you could leave us a review on your podcast app or on Spotify. It genuinely helps other curious people find the show.
Corn
It really does. We love seeing the community grow and hearing your thoughts on these deep dives. You can find all our past episodes, including the ones we mentioned today about USB-C and multi monitor setups, over at myweirdprompts.com. We have a full archive there with an RSS feed for you to subscribe to.
Herman
This has been episode four hundred forty of My Weird Prompts. Thanks for joining us in the Jerusalem studio today.
Corn
Thanks everyone. We will see you in the next one.
Herman
Until next time!
Corn
So, Herman, before we wrap up, I just had one more thought about Daniel's setup. If he's putting the computer in a different room, what about the audio? He didn't mention it in the prompt, but he's got those nice studio monitors on his desk.
Herman
Oh, that is a classic pitfall. If he is using a USB audio interface, he is back to the USB distance limits we discussed. If he is running analog cables, like TRS or XLR, he can actually go quite far, especially with balanced XLR cables. Those are designed for long runs in concert halls. But if he is just using a standard three point five millimeter headphone jack, he is going to pick up a lot of electrical noise over a thirty foot run.
Corn
Right, he might start hearing the refrigerator or the microwave through his speakers.
Herman
Exactly. So the best bet for him would be to keep the audio interface at the desk, connected via that long fiber optic USB cable we talked about. That way, the digital to analog conversion happens right where he is sitting, and the analog cables to the speakers stay short.
Corn
It always comes back to that one high speed data pipe. If you can get a reliable USB or Thunderbolt connection to the desk, you can put everything else on a hub.
Herman
Precisely. The hub is the key. It simplifies the whole thing from a bundle of ten cables down to maybe just two or three high quality ones.
Corn
It is a bit of a puzzle, but a satisfying one to solve. I think Daniel is going to be busy this weekend.
Herman
Better him than us. I am happy just talking about it.
Corn
Fair enough. Well, thanks for the expertise, Herman Poppleberry.
Herman
Always a pleasure, Corn.
Corn
Alright, that really is it for today. Thanks for listening to My Weird Prompts. We will be back soon with another deep dive into whatever strange or wonderful topic Daniel or our listeners throw at us next.
Herman
See you then.
Corn
Bye for now!

This episode was generated with AI assistance. Hosts Herman and Corn are AI personalities.

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