Fiber optic cable aerial installation is very common in optical
communication these days. For technicians, there are some tips as
following.
Firstly, we should make it clear that what problems we might meet during the installation.
There are mostly three common problems. Dead end pole is a utility pole on which self-supporting figure 8 fiber optic cable
or a steel messenger is tensioned and terminated into a dead-end
fixture. Messenger span refers to the length of continuous steel
messenger tensioned between two dead-end poles. Intermediate poles are
all the poles between two dead-end poles.
Secondly, we should make a plan before the installation.
Careful
planning and preparation are necessary before any aerial cable
installations. During the cable route survey, representatives from all
necessary parties including utilities, street depart, etc should be
present. Before even detailed planning begins, approval should be get
from all involved parties. Sufficient clearance for new cable along the
right of way should be confirmed during the route survey. Existing poles
should be used whenever possible in order to save cost.
Where on a
pole to place the aerial fiber optic cable? Fiber optic cables weigh
less than equivalent copper cables and also sag less, so fiber optic
cables should occupy the uppermost available communications space on a
pole. Sufficient clearances must be maintained between fiber optic
cables and electrical power cables on joint-use poles. You need to refer
to current National Electrical Safety Code for the proper clearances.
Existing dead-end pole must be evaluated to see whether they can
withstand the stresses during aerial cable installation. You have to
evaluate whether temporary guying is needed in order to relieve the
temporary unbalanced loading during cable installation.
Splice
locations are usually selected during the cable route survey. They are
chosen to allow for the longest possible continuous cable spans and a
minimum number of splices. They should be easily accessible to a
splicing vehicle. Aerial installation should never be done in wet
conditions. And make sure all personnel are properly trained for pole
line work. Fiber optic cables (including all dielectric cables) should
be properly grounded when installed in the vicinity of high-voltage
power cables.
Lastly, it comes to the installation. In fact, there are two ways for aerial installation.
Lashing a fiber optic cable to a steel messenger
A
steel messenger is first installed between the poles. Then a cable reel
trailer and truck are used to pull the cable along the messenger. A
cable guide and cable lasher are used to wrap around both the messenger
and the fiber cable to secure the fiber cable to the messenger.
Following the cable lasher is an aerial bucket truck which makes
necessary adjustments. At each pole, the fiber optic cable forms an
expansion loop to allow for expansion of the messenger. The expansion
loop's sizes have both a length and a depth, its length should be larger
than twice its depth. The fiber cable should also maintain its minimum
bending radius at all times.
Direct installation of self-supporting figure 8 aerial fiber optic cables
Figure of 8 cable
greatly simplifies the task of placing fiber optic cables onto a aerial
plant. The self-supporting figure-8 cable incorporates both a steel
messenger and the fiber cable into a single jacket of Figure-8 cross
section. The combination of strand and optical fiber into a single cable
allows rapid one-step installation and results in a more durable aerial
plant.
As figure 8 cables may be used in the aerial fiber optic cable installation, we recommen the fiber optic cable supplier FiberStore to you. There you can buy optical cable with good price.
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