As a installer that repaired a lot of microbends on the drop cable coming in I would highly encourage stripping the buffer tube right after the cable clamp. Over the years buffertubes can get pretty brittle if installed inside where the temps are at a normal level. Then they break in the first bend right at the trays entrence and introduce stress. On long GPON runs that can mean too much loss.
normally customer will do the splicing between the incoming fibers to pigtail by fusion splicer in the field, this video is just for showing how to manage the pigtails inside the box. Are you working in fiber optic field? if yes, welcome to check www.fcst.com for more details.
23:30 Kommentar: Πολύ κατανοητό.Εξαιρετικό!
As a installer that repaired a lot of microbends on the drop cable coming in I would highly encourage stripping the buffer tube right after the cable clamp. Over the years buffertubes can get pretty brittle if installed inside where the temps are at a normal level. Then they break in the first bend right at the trays entrence and introduce stress. On long GPON runs that can mean too much loss.
Get it, thank you very much for your correction!
Im confused on how the optical fibers are connected. How do you splice the incoming fibers to the pigtail?
normally customer will do the splicing between the incoming fibers to pigtail by fusion splicer in the field, this video is just for showing how to manage the pigtails inside the box. Are you working in fiber optic field? if yes, welcome to check www.fcst.com for more details.
@@fibercablesolution818 ahh ok. Thanks for bunch.