[huge snippage for brevity, apologies for rubbish formatting]

I'm not 100% sure I'm right in what follows (it's been a long time) but 
improvements are welcome. It builds on much of what has already been said.

Termination has been covered by various contributors - termination reduces (but 
may not completely eliminate) reflections.

Reflections in a single segment setup (two boxes, one cable) are relatively 
simple to cope with in a setup from the Qbus era where things aren't 
particularly fast.

In a three box (two cable) setup my recollection is that the configuration 
rules require the cables to be of significantly different lengths, and the 
reason for this is to ensure that the two sets of reflections are timed 
signifcantly differently and canot make Bad Things happen by arriving at the 
same time as each other.

Consider the middle box (of 3) is driving a bus transition. Signals will 
propagate from the middle box to each of the ends. When the moving rope er 
sorry voltage transition reaches the end of the cable, it will be reflected to 
some extent. If the cable segments are both the same length(ish), the 
reflections will come back to the middle box at round about the same time, 
superimpose on each other, and potentially cause confusion. (Does that sound 
plausible?)

If the cable segments are of significantly different lengths then the 
reflections will arrive back at the middle at significantly different times and 
the reflections will be more manageable - less risk of Bad Things happening 
when they superpose.

Or something along those lines.

Anyway, hopefully the "different cable lengths so the reflection timings are 
different" will ring a few bells even if it's not actually right.

Have a lot of fun
John Wallace

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