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Fiber Testing

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Must test to specifications designed into the system ... Testing is pointless on dirty fiber ... Have tested patch cables and adapter cables in varying lengths ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fiber Testing


1
Fiber Testing
  • Perspective!
  • Fiber is just one part of overall system
  • Modulation rates
  • Laser characteristics
  • Receiver characteristics
  • Distance requirements
  • Fiber types and interfaces
  • Must test to specifications designed into the
    system
  • High transmission speeds and longer fiber spans
    make testing and verification much more critical
    than most Quilt engineers have ever had to deal,
    with even just a few years ago.
  • Performance depends upon total optical
    charactization
  • Fiber (types, distances, etc)
  • Equipment (e.g. OADMs, DCMs, etc)

2
Fiber Characterization
  • Testing prior to placing in service
  • Measure end to end distance
  • Verify splice conformance and identify poor
    cross-connects
  • Identify high reflectance points
  • Attenuation by segment
  • Different fiber types exhibit different loss
  • Measure each fiber
  • Both directions
  • At both 1310 nm and 1550 nm (assuming only SM
    fibers)
  • Dispersion
  • These days we should measure both Chromatic
    Dispersion and Polarization Mode Dispersion
  • Wan segments may need DCM how much depends on
    application specifics (WDM? Laser types? Fiber
    type? Distance?)

3
Equipment
  • Field optical testset platform which supports
    multiple modules (e.g. Exfo FTB400)
  • Optical Time Domain Reflectometer (OTDR) module
  • Used often for repair verification so make it
    small and portable
  • Chromatic Dispersion module/testset
  • OC48 and higher speed interfaces vary
    dramatically
  • Polarization Mode Dispersion module/testset
  • Should have this for 10gig (or higher) WAN
    segments
  • Optical Spectrum Analyzer (OSA)
  • Required for WDM systems
  • Useful for non-WDM problem resolution as well

4
Equipment
  • Cleaning
  • Testing is pointless on dirty fiber
  • Cletop (or equivalent) fiber termination cleaner
    (for male components such as SC/FC/LC connectors)
  • Swabs (for female components such as bulkhead
    connectors and ports)
  • Handheld fiber inspection microscope (male
    components)
  • Fiber port camera for female ports
  • Compressed air canisters for blowing out
    components

5
Fiber Operation and Maintenance
  • Who owns the fiber?
  • Owner typically is responsible for operational
    maintenance and repair of WAN fiber
  • They may have more than just your fiber in the
    bundle, have access to conduit, etc.
  • You (fiber customer) may be required to assist in
    maintenance and/or repair by providing access to
    your facilities for testing, verifying repairs
    are made to specification and on time, etc.
  • A repair at 3am in a manhole on a busy street
    needs to be tested then not the next day after
    they button up the manhole.
  • A re-splice may cost several thousand dollars!
    And significant haedaches
  • There may be several providers along your path
  • You will need to identify where a failure is
    occuring in order to notify the correct provider
    for action
  • OTDR simplifies this process.
  • Includes patch fibers, laterals, concatenations
    along entire path

6
Fiber O M
  • Fiber engineering
  • Aerial vs buried
  • Hanging fiber is often easier to repair
  • Experience shows mtbf for hanging fiber is really
    pretty good
  • SMF28 vs other (e.g. TW, TWrs, LEAF, etc)
  • SMF optimized for 1310nm operation not WDM
  • SMF works fine for WDM in reduced span, simple
    WDM networks
  • Be careful of ZDSF and fiber planted before
    1993/94
  • ZDSF not good for WDM systems, old fiber had PMD
    issues
  • Diverse, collapsed, or unprotected
  • Obviously, diversity minimizes operational impact
    of physical fiber outages

7
Fiber O M
  • Splicing vs Patching
  • Splicing must be done well
  • If you must be responsible for splicing, make
    sure you have good equipment and skilled
    personnel doing it
  • A good fiber tech is worth their weight in
  • Splicing provides much better connections
  • Better media transferal
  • Less reflectance
  • Less loss across interfaces
  • Splicing reduces risk of inadvertent disconnects
  • But makes testing more difficult in case of
    repairs

8
Fiber O M
  • Patch fiber and cross-connects
  • Cross-connects generate 90 (or more) of fiber
    outages
  • Patch fibers are dirty or mechanically faulty
  • Poorly seated at connections
  • These fibers are most often fiddled with
  • In POPs, fiber trays are full, fiber pulls
    inadvertently crimp existing fibers in trays, etc.

9
Fiber termination
  • Termination should be done by qualified personnel
  • No such thing as saving money here this isnt
    building your own Cat5 cable
  • SC? FC? LC?
  • UPC or APC?
  • UPC is conventional flat fiber Ultra Polished
    Connector
  • APC is Angle Polished reduced reflectance
    often advisable for high speed or very sensitive
    optical engineering (DWDM, 10gig, etc)
  • Try to standardize, but not completely possible
  • Have tested patch cables and adapter cables in
    varying lengths (LC-SC, FC-SC, etc.)

10
WARNING!!! Do not gaze into fiber with remaining
eye!
11
Active Optics
  • New equipment is required by law to have an
    Automatic Power Disable feature for high power
    lasers
  • Turns down laser in case of optical LoS
  • Some WDM systems are launching at 5 db (!)
  • Amplified systems particularly Raman amps
    will significantly boost this power further
  • Protects field personnel from exposure to errant
    laser energy during repair, testing, or fiber
    crossconnecting process
  • RE community needs to consider these as real
    occupational safety issues need to explore and
    establish appropriate safety procedures.

12
Metro Fiber Considerations
  • Access, Access, Access
  • Points of Presence 24x7access for your techs,
    and for other techs (other fiber providers,
    service providers, etc)
  • Some fiber pops and/or huts require special
    safety training for techs (e.g. RR huts, highway
    huts, etc.)
  • Security
  • Security is extremely important, but
  • Too much can be onerous and unworkable
  • Design your POPs with security and access in
    mind
  • E.g. Cage space and/or suites provide
    appropriate security while allowing significant
    flexibility
  • If you invest in long term fiber, expect to grow
    at your POP arrange expansion space early so
    that it grows in a consolidated space.

13
Personnel
  • Optical Engineers are things we must develop.
  • Metro and regional fiber networks designed for
    very high performance DWDM systems require
    significantly different engineering
    specializations than campus networks.
  • We need to hire more junior engineers and train
    them for metro/regional networking requirements
  • Hiring these skills is expenive and difficult
  • Existing senior engineers are both
    over-subscribed and expensive filling the
    pipeline with new blood will help control these
    costs over the long term, and provide the breadth
    and scope of skills we need to architect,
    engineer, contract, deploy, operate, and maintain
    the new infrastructure.

14
Fiber Operations Maintenance
  • Record keeping
  • A good RON will create a database containing all
    the information associated with fiber facilities
  • Segment identifiers, provider, POCs,
  • A-Z ends down to the bay, shelf, and position,
    termination types, length
  • Fiber characteristics type of fiber, measured
    loss, dispersion (CD/PMD)
  • Higher layer circuit connections
  • Customer identifier, pocs, etc.
  • Concatenated segments,
  • Cross-connects end to end
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