The present invention relates to methods and arrangements to minimize excess length of fiber cable between different equipment locations.
A challenge for large-scale point-to-point Fiber-To-The-Home installations is the large amount of fibers to terminate and route to active equipment in a central office. In a future scenario with all-fiber access, i.e. fiber replaces the current copper access, thousands of fibers or more could be terminated at one side. At these large sites, the optical distribution could be placed at one floor, while the active equipment could be placed at a different floor. This further emphasizes the importance of a flexible and cost effective fiber management solution in the central office. In a typical installation of today the outside plant fiber cable entering the central office must be terminated in a joint closure where it is fusion spliced to an indoor cable that terminates in a network side optical distribution frame ODF. The ODF is used as the interface. In the optical distribution frame ODF each fiber is accessible and in a transmission system designed for metro or backbone transport typically two ODFs (one for the network side and one for the equipment side) are used in order to obtain a full flexibility for equipment to network reconfiguration. Finally a patch cable is used to connect the fiber to the active equipment. One solution for the patch cable frequently used today is a breakout cable, which basically consist of several pre-connectorized patch cables inside a common cable sheath. This common sheath is easily removed and thereby provides flexibility to access the individual patch cables at the same it eases handling. Excess fiber is handled at the ODF, at cable ladders or at active equipment. Winding the excess fiber on reels placed inside the cabinets or outside in a separate cabinet next to e.g. the ODF cabinet usually does it. This can be done due to the relatively low quantities of fiber in the transport network. Storage of excess fiber cables is a problem that is well known, see for example U.S. Pat. No. 5,708,751. However, in a full scale FTTH access network the huge amount of fibers will need an improved way of handling excess fiber.
The present invention solves problems related to expensive logistics and handling to keep track on fixed length breakout cables and space needed for winding of excess fiber between equipment in different equipment locations, such as cabinets.
The problems are solved by the invention by a method to couple together one end of a ribbon fiber cable to a first equipment cabinet. Then route the ribbon fiber cable without excess length to a second cabinet and finally couple together the other end of the ribbon fiber cable to the second cabinet.
More in detail, the problems are solved by a method to minimize excess fiber cable in large-scale point-to-point fiber installations between equipment located in different equipment cabinets. Each cabinet comprises at least one fan-out casing. The casings are arranged to connect the ribbon fiber cables with equipment in the cabinets via fan-out fiber cables. The method comprises the following steps:
An arrangement according to the invention comprises means for performing the above mentioned method steps.
A purpose with the invention is to eliminate fiber excess length when connecting equipment in separate equipment cabinets.
Yet another advantage is that the cost of logistics and handling of different pre-connectorized cables are eliminated.
The invention will now be described more in detail with the aid of preferred embodiments in connection with the enclosed drawings.
For a system similar to the one disclosed in the schematic
On the active equipment cabinet side a ribbon splice casing 5 is used to connect an MPO-8 connector 10 (with an 8-f ribbon) to the 8-f ribbon in the ribbon fiber cable 3 coming from the ODF cabinet. The casing 5 for the 8-f ribbon splice is assumed to be approximately the same size as the fan-out casing 4 and with similar properties, and thus to be handled in the same way.
The method according to the invention will now be explained. The method comprises the following steps:
The arrangement used in the invention comprises means for adjusting the cables to suitable length without excess. As means for adjusting the cables, a fiber and cable cutter might be used. As means for assembling a connector, a fiber cleaving tool, fiber polisher, assembly tool for connectors might be used. The fusion splicing is preferably done with a portable fusion splice means.
As mentioned, the reciprocal order between the method steps is of minor importance for the invention. The equipment locations can be located on different floors and routing of the ribbon fiber cable does not necessarily be on a cable ladder system. The splicing of cable ends does not necessarily have to be in a casing like the one disclosed in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0302397-5 | Sep 2003 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE04/01192 | 8/13/2004 | WO | 11/10/2006 |