Home : Webinars : XtendedFlex® Cable Family Webinar Summary & Key Takeaways
XtendedFlex® Cable Family Webinar Summary & Key Takeaways
This webinar explores how XtendedFlex cables are engineered to deliver reliable RF performance in continuous flex and dynamic applications. Unlike standard “flexible” cables, which may perform well initially but degrade over time, XtendedFlex is specifically designed to withstand long-term mechanical stress, repeated motion, and extreme routing conditions. Through real-world testing and application examples, the session highlights how material selection and construction directly impact durability and signal integrity in motion-driven environments.
Not all flexible cables are designed for continuous movement. Performance with flexure is one of the most demanding requirements for any RF cable, and there is no simple correlation between flexibility (bend moment) and long-term durability. Many cables that appear flexible will fail prematurely when subjected to repeated motion over time.
Why Cables Fail in Dynamic Applications
The primary failure mode in continuously flexed cables is material fatigue:
Work hardening of metal conductors leads to brittleness and eventual breakage
Dielectric and jacket materials can concentrate stress at specific point along the cable
Plastic degradation
HD polyethylene can harden under repeated motion
LD polyethylene can soften, reducing structural integrity
These factors result in signal instability, mechanical failure, and reduced cable life in dynamic environments.
How XtendedFlex Solves These Challenges
XtendedFlex cables are engineered with optimized materials and constructions to improve longevity under continuous flex:
Designed to minimize stress concentration during movement
Engineered conductor and dielectric systems to resist work hardening
Jacket materials selected for durability under repeated motion
Proven through rigorous lab simulations that replicate real-world movement
Real-World Testing & Validation
XtendedFlex performance is validated through application-specific testing that mirrors actual use cases:
Transit systems
Simulated exact cable movement using a custom Tic-Toc tester
Tested up to ~96,000 cycles to represent a 30-year lifespan
Evaluated across temperature extremes from -20°C to 50°C
Satellite tracking systems
Successfully tested up to 1 million flex cycles over a 10-year equivalent lifespan