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May 2023
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Focus On Standards
Are Standards Ignoring OSP?
OLTS or OTDR?
New Fiber U Minicourse on Jargon
New Jargon - Colored or Gray
What Do Employers Expect?
More Pole Wars
CFOTs Get Good Jobs
Splices Go Better With Coke
4 New FOA Schools Around The World
Updated FOA Schools Map
Links To Resources On Broadband
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News New Corning Manufacturing Campus
The Economy
Giant Telescope in Chile Uses Fiber
Boston MTBA Installs Cable For Rail Safety
ISE Expo 2023
FiberWizards Online Programs
Technical
Problems With Micro/HD Cables? Flex Ribbons Enhance Air-Blown Fiber
LC Connector Simplifies Insertion/Removal
Links For High Level Engineers Managing Projects - Gantt Charts
FOA Color Code Guides
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involve and the qualifications for the workers in
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Want to know more about fiber optics?
Looking for specific information? Here's the largest
technical reference on the web: The
FOA Online Fiber Optic Reference Guide.

Free online self-study programs
on many fiber optics and cabling topics are
available at Fiber U,
FOA's online web-based training website.
FOA
Reference Books
Available Printed or eBooks
The fiber book is
available in Spanish and French


Lennie
and Uncle Ted's
Guides are now also available as free iBooks on
iTunes.

Click on any of
the books to learn more.
- Fiber
Optic Safety Poster to download and
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Current Issue of FOA
Newsletter
Highlights from the FOA Newsletter in 2022
Multiple bullets hit Xfinity fiber cable, causing outage in Oakland (February 22)
More Thoughts On Broadband For Rural Areas (March 22) (June 22)
Fiber Optics In The Movies - Star Wars Special Effects (March 22)
Fiber Optics Again Helps Find A Famous Shipwreck (April 22)
Thinking About A Fiber Optic Project? Better Get Started Soon (April 22)
AT&T Says Good-bye To Copper (April 22)
More Pole Stories And Photos (May 22)
Why Stop At Gigabits? Let's Design Fiber Networks For Terabits (July 22)
Understanding The Fiber Optic Workforce (August 22)
Does the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) truly benefit people in rural America? (September 22)
Can Wireless Compete With Fiber? Satellites? (October 22)
What is Certification/How Do you Learn (November 22)
School Special Issue (with photos) (December 22)
New Fiber U Self Study Programs
Fiber Characterization (for long distance, high speed networks)
Minicourses: Attenuators, Reference Cables, Project Management
December 2022 Special Feature: A Salute To FOA's Schools And Training Organizations
Time To Renew Your
FOA Certifications?
To
keep your FOA certifications active, you need to
renew them when they expire. Now we have a new more
convenient way to renew - an online store at Paypal
- where you can quickly and conveniently use your
PayPal account or your credit card to renew your
certifications.
- Renew
online with a credit card or PayPal
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FOA
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FOA
- official page on LinkedIn - covers FOA, technology and jobs in the fiber optic
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fiber optic technology and training topics
Grupo
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Focus On Standards
Many of the standards for fiber optics were
written in the 1980s and 1990s here in the US because we were the major
developers of the technologies essential for building fiber optic
networks. The rest of the world generally followed the original EIA and
TIA standards as other countries and organizations began developing
their own standards. When you get so many groups developing standards
focused on their own ideas, there is going to be variation in what
standards cover and how they cover them.
Here are two current issues regarding standards that illustrate how that happens.
Are Standards Ignoring the OSP?
Just over 40 years ago, as the fiber optic
industry was just developing in the US, the Electronics Industry
Association began hosting meetings to define and develop standards for
this emerging market. You can imagine the difficulty of designing and
building networks without standards. At the time, there were three
different incompatible multimode fibers, singlemode was just getting
started and there was some issues in simply defining the core size. A
dozen connectors were being built by a dozen different manufacturers
using almost that many mating technologies. One could not even measure
optical power in a system since there were no transfer standards to
allow calibrating instruments.
But all the big companies like AT&T, Corning,
3M, AMP, along with dozens of smaller companies, representatives of
government agencies including the National Bureau of Standards and
military services met several times during they year to define what
standards were needed and then write them. It took about fifteen years
for most of the component and test standards to get written. And EIA was
absorbed by TIA, the Telecommunications Industry Association.
Soon after the EIA committees got started, there
were efforts at other organizations to define network standards that
would encompass fiber optic communications, including Ethernet,
ATM/SONET, FDDI and others. As the Internet frenzy grew and networks
were reaching for gigabit speeds, the standards committees were very
active and meetings well-attended.
When the Internet "bubble" burst in 2001, the
fiber optic industry was severely affected. Many companies went out of
business and big companies struggled. Participation in standards work in
the US declined also, particularly in the TIA FO2/6 committees. Much of
the standards work moved outside the US to ISO/IEC/ITU.
In 2009, the struggling FO committees were merged
into TIA TR42, the premises cabling standards committees that focused on
structured cabling which was mostly copper. In the past 12-13 years
since TIA merged the FO and TR42 standards committees, two committees
focused on components, TR42.12 and TR42.13, have taken over the focus on
all fiber optic components pretty well, but the fiber optic systems
committee, TR42.11, has remained focused on the premises applications.
As a result, there have been some premises standards projects like data
centers, healthcare and education, but nothing on OSP projects like
FTTH, fiber for wireless, metro networks, utility networks, etc. The
absence of FTTH is particularly glaring, especially with the current
focus on FTTH for broadband.
When we mentioned this to some people involved in standards, they
pointed to the international GPON standards for FTTH, but that is not a
proper analogy. GPON standards are like Ethernet standards; defining the
network, not the applications. Ethernet standards require standards
like TIA 568 or ISO 11801 for structured cabling. GPON needs a similar
standard to help those designing FTTH networks. It would be more
comprehensive than TIA 568, with details for designing urban and rural
networks, architectures with cascading splitters or home-run fibers, and
guidance on choosing and testing components.
We've also been told there are "OSP" standards, but the groups who have
done them define OSP as outside the building, but only covering an area
large enough to be encompassing a campus, and that small geographic
focus is certainly not real OSP.
OSP applications have a lot of overlap. Cities, counties and states are
now trying to build "open access" networks that can support FTTH,
wireless, utilities, intelligent traffic control as well as traditional
point to point communications and direct Internet access. From
discussions between FOA and some of these groups, it seems obvious that
being able to point to a document or documents covering how these
networks work and can work together would be a major advantage for
everyone involved.
Should we have standards for cabling to support OSP - FTTH, metro networks, wireless, etc.? Send us your comments.
OLTS Or OTDR?
When the original fiber optic testing standards were
written at EIA/TIA in the 1980s, there ended up being several versions
of the standards for testing installed cable plants. And they can be
confusing.
- Insertion Loss - Multimode Fiber - OFSTP-14 (led to IEC-61280-4-1)
- Insertion Loss - Singlemode Fiber - OFSTP-7 (led to IEC-61280-4-2)
- OTDR - Measurement of Splice and Connector Loss - FOTP-8
- OTDR - Measurement of Fiber Point Defects - FOTP-59
-
OTDR - Measurement of Fiber or Cable Length - FOTP -60
- OTDR - Measurement of Fiber or Cable Attenuation - FOTP-61 (all incorporated in IEC-61280-4)
With the globalization of standards, the two insertion loss standards
were adopted worldwide but with a very big change, the addition of OTDR
testing. later when TIA adopted the new international standards, it
included a change in title from "Measurement of Optical Power Loss of
Installed (Multimode/Singlemode) Fiber Cable Plant" to "Installed
Cable Plant (SM/MM) Attenuation Measurement."
The international standards which were adopted by TIA have 4 test
methods: OLTS/1 cable reference, OLTS/3 cable reference, OLTS/2 cable
reference and OTDR. Plus these standards refer to "RTM (Reference
Test Methods) and ATM (Alternative Test Methods), where the definitions
are a bit vague but RTM is generally OLTS and ATM is OTDR.
In the adoption of the International standard that adds OTDR testing,
TIA chose to adopt a different terminology in TIA 568.3, the fiber optic
premises cabling document, calling OLTS testing "Tier 1" and OTDR
testing "Tier 2."
It has been recently discovered that all these documents are not
consistent, nor is the understanding of what individual standards say.
Some users think Tier 1 testing (OLTS) is sufficient, while others say
Tier 2 testing (OTDR) provides more information and therefore is
sufficient. There is also ambiguity over whether bi-directional OTDR
testing is required.
This uncertainty of these requirements is now a topic of concern at TIA.
Of course when you have so many standards developed by different groups
and/or at different times, this is not unexpected. In the meantime,
testing with either method can be said to meet standards.
New Fiber U MiniCourse - Fiber Optic Jargon
There is a new MiniCourse at Fiber U - Fiber Optic Jargon.
Jargon is the most important thing you need to learn when you learn
about a new technology. This short Fiber U MiniCourse is intended to
introduce you to fiber optic jargon and make learning about fiber much
easier. It's aimed at novices but is a good refresher for even
experienced techs.
New Jargon - Colored or Gray
A press release we were reading recently used two
terms we were not familiar with - colored and gray fibers. After
discovering the terms were unknown to some others we asked, we searched
and found some references to the terms in articles in the Middle East.
Colored fibers appear to be fibers used with DWDM systems and grey
fibers are fibers with only one wavelength.
Technically using the word color instead of wavelength is incorrect.
Color (or colour if you prefer) is a characteristic attributed to light
in the range of sensitivity of the human eye and the human eye cannot
see the infrared wavelengths used in fiber optics.

Likewise, gray is a term for a "color" between black and white - black
being no color at all and white being all colors - often referred to as a
neutral or achromatic color.
A single color - or wavelength - would be more properly described as
monochromatic, except that the term also refers to black and white
photography.
Rather than color and grey, we'd suggest DWDM and mono, but who knows what the industry will prefer.
What Do Employers Expect From A Fiber Optic Tech?In last month's FOA Newsletter,
we discussed what a workforce survey done in Maine revealed about
employers' expectations for their employees. This month, we'd like to
share some insights from an interview in ISE Magazine with Joe Pelligrini, Chief Construction Officer, Great Plains Communications (GPC).

On Employee Development And Retention
We have found in multiple employee surveys that employees in the
five to seven service year range seem to be the most at risk. The reason
tends to be that they’ve been in the business or doing a job long
enough to become extremely proficient. Yet, if the time and energy
aren't spent with them to help them continue to learn and grow, they
stagnate. These people have extremely marketable skill sets and can go
find other opportunities. It is important for businesses to not only
understand that but also take action to retain and grow employees.
Any of us who have been doing this for a long enough time
realize some of the biggest enjoyment we get out of work is helping,
training, and mentoring others who are coming up in their careers and
want to learn.
For GPC, it’s recognizing top talent and what they bring to the
business, ensuring benefits and flexibility are there, but also
providing the opportunity to continually work and improve skill sets,
and then share their abilities and skills with others who are up and
coming. This creates a true mentoring and team environment that results
in successful, happy employees.
We’re trying to
entice employees to the industry who want to be here and grow with the
business by creating an environment they want to stay in. That’s an
ongoing culture initiative in continuing to change and adjust to meet
external industry demands and challenges. Our initiatives are our
advantages when attracting quality employees.
Appreciate and learn from where you are at that moment in time. So
many people want to grow and run to the next level and hurry up to the
next piece of their career or the next job title before truly
understanding and becoming an expert where they are. As you move through
the ranks by learning and developing those skills, you continue to
round yourself out.
Being A Leader
One of the smartest things you can do as a leader is close your
mouth and let others express their interests, opinions, or their
versions of things. When I do that, I learn something, and it makes me
look a little bit differently at a solution. We find better ways with
more input. My biggest advice would be for leaders to learn how to
listen and not think that because you have a title you have a right to
talk more. Learning to ask questions and listen yields better results in
almost every single format.
Joe Pellegrini is the Chief Construction Officer at Great
Plains Communications (GPC), one of the largest privately -owned digital
infrastructure providers in the Midwest, headquartered in Blair,
Nebraska. Read the entire interview in ISE Magazine.
Another Skirmish In The "Pole Wars"
In the same interview in ISE Magazine, Joe Pelligrini also made an interesting comment on fiber optic cable plant construction:
On the network deployment side, a growing industry challenge over
the past 10 years has been difficulty getting on power and telephone
company poles. The amount of make-ready and the time frames associated
has changed the makeup of what we used to consider a successful build,
which was 80% aerial and 20% underground in many places across the
country.
There used to be cost savings associated with going aerial. The
higher expenses today and greater difficulties for third parties like
us to get access to those poles have forced more of an underground
build. The time frames are also forcing a lot of companies to go
underground more because we can build underground in many cases much
quicker than aerial. For aerial fiber deployments, getting to some of
these communities and servicing them effectively has been difficult in
terms of network deployment labor challenges.
See "Pole Wars" in the FOA Newsletter July-August 2016.
CFOTs Get Good JobsWe're
always hearing stories from our schools about their students getting
good jobs. The latest comes from Gilberto Guitarte who teaches an FOA
CFOT Certification course at Wake Technical Community College
in North Carolina. One of Gilberto's students, Moses Clayton, got his
CFOT in January and started as a splicer for Prince Telecom, a
contractor installing fiber for Google Fiber in Raleigh, NC. Moses has
already been promoted to R&M (Repair and Maintenance) tech who has a
truck equipped with sophisticated underground locating equipment and
fiber test gear like OTDRs to support Prince Telecom's installation and
maintenance operations.

Josh Farmer of Prince Telecom, Moses Clayton and Gilberto Guitarte (L) and Moses at work.
Splices Go Better With Coke

Thanks to Muhammad Tariq who spotted this in Pakistan.
FOA Welcomes New Approved Training Organizations
FOA is pleased to welcome 4 new schools to the
worldwide network of training organizations offering FOA approved
training and FOA certifications. With FOA's extensive worldwide network
of training organizations, it's possible to get FOA-certified almost
anywhere! Use the updated FOA schools map below to find any FOA school.
402 Bossier Parish Community College Bossier City LA
407 Virginia Highlands Community College, Abingdon VA
408 British Columbia Institute of Technology, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
776 Prime Training and Services, Akwa, Cameroon

FOA has updated its online interactive map showing the FOA approved
schools around the world. The new map shows the location of FOA schools,
allows zooming in on a location and now includes a search function that
allows locating a school by name or location. Once you locate a school,
you can click on the school name and link to their website.
Latest FOA Book: Fiber Broadband (Paperback and Kindle)
How does broadband work? Without fiber optics it would not work.
This book is not the typical FOA technical textbook - it is written for
anyone who wants to understand fiber broadband or fiber optics or the
Internet. It's also aimed at STEM teachers who want to include
communications technology in their classes. This book will try to
explain not only how fiber broadband works, but how
it was developed. It is intended to be an introduction to
communications technology
appropriate for a communications course at almost any level (junior
high, high school or
college,) for managers involved with broadband projects, or for anyone
who just wonders how all this stuff works.
The Fiber Optic Association Guide To Fiber Broadband Paperback ($12.95) and Kindle ($9.95) versions available from Amazon or most booksellers. Kindle version is in color!
New Fiber U MiniCourse Fiber Optic Project Management
Cross Reference Guide to Textbooks, Online Guide and Fiber U FOA Videos Guide.
FOA has a web page with resources on fiber broadband and the IIJA/BEAD funding programs.
FOA Newsletter
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Technical
Worth
Reading Q&A
Training/FiberU
Resoures
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News
Lots more news
in Worth Reading below
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Corning Opens New Fiber/Cable Manufacturing Campus in NC

Corning has manufactured optical fiber and cable in North Carolina for
more than 40 years. With the opening of the Trivium campus, Corning will
manufacture optical cable at two sites in Hickory and at sites in
Newton and Winston-Salem. The company manufactures optical fiber in
Concord and Wilmington. Charlotte is home to Corning’s Optical
Communications headquarters.
With the campus’s two new facilities, Corning will help provide U.S.
network operators with the cable they need. These advanced manufacturing
facilities will add hundreds of jobs to Corning’s existing North
Carolina workforce of more than 5,000. The new campus is part of a
series of investments by Corning totaling more than $500 million since
2020, helping to meet growing fiber and cable demand and strong customer
commitments.
Read more.
The Economy:
Cracks in the Economy Are Growing
There are increasing signs that
the economy is weakening in a meaningful way. Private employment gains
slowed to below +200,000 in March for the first time since 2020.
Construction employment showed the first sizeable decline of the cycle.
We remain confident that employers in manufacturing and housing will
choose to reduce employment and related labor costs in the face of
declining demand and rising wages.
Citibank Newsletter April 10, 2023
Worldwide IT spending continues slow decline: IDC
For the fifth consecutive
month, International Data Corporation (IDC) reports that it has lowered
its 2023 forecast for worldwide IT spending, as technology investments
continue to show the impact of a weakening economy. Stephen Minton, vice
president in IDC's Data & Analytics research group, explained:
"Since the fourth quarter of last year, we have seen clear
and measurable signs of a moderate pullback in some areas of IT
spending. Tech spending remains resilient compared to historical
economic downturns and other types of business spending, but rising
interest rates are now impacting capital spending."
Read more - CI&M
A Giant Telescope Grows In Chile (NY Times)
The spectrograph on the Local Volume Mapper, a new
center at Las Campanas Observatory, will record 4,000 colors for every
point in the sky using four telescopes and 1,944 fibers, each the width
of a human hair.

Instruments for the Local Volume Mapper connect to the telescope on fiber optics.
Telescopes use fiber optics to transmit light from many individual stars
to instruments remote from the telescopes. Instead of using the
telescope to study one star at a time, it can study many and increase
the value of telescope time.
From the NY Times
Boston's MBTA installs $80 million underground
cable network to prevent train collisions (and outages caused by aerial
cable faults)
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA)
will spend approximately $80 million to install an underground fiber
optic cable network aimed at improving safety and reducing service
disruption throughout the commuter rail system. The new infrastructure
will gradually replace the arial fiber optic network that the T
implemented in 2020 to support the federally mandated positive train
control system.
All commuter and freight railroads are required to operate PTC, which
monitors train movements to prevent collisions and derailments.
“We will migrate the communications part of this system from the aerial
network to the new underground network,” said project manager Jaime
Garmendia. “This helps protect the system’s communications. “Buried
fibers are much more resilient to extreme weather and the effects of
third party activity, whether it be construction, accident (or) tree
fall.”

According to Garmendia, fiber breaks in the existing antenna network
have occurred more frequently than expected in recent years. A
“fair amount” of spare fiber was added to the system in anticipation of
about five disruptions a year, but over the past year, more than triple
that number, or 16, have occurred, he said.
“So the intent of this project,” Garmendia said, “is to bury a new fiber
optic cable network in the right-of-way itself to improve system
resiliency and allow for 100 percent uptime.”
“We’ve had fiber optics buried on the Old Colony Lines for over 20
years,” Garmendia said, citing the spurs that connect the South Shore to
downtown Boston. “And it’s very easy to maintain compared to the
antenna network that we’ve only had for a couple of years.”
Boston Herald
Registration Open For ISE Expo 2023

ISE EXPO 2023, the OSP telecom conference, showcases the next wave of
disruptive products, technologies and solutions for todays' and future
networks. It's a conference for the professional who plans, builds,
operates and maintains these networks. At ISE EXPO 2023 you can see,
touch and demo new products, technologies and solutions for telecom
networks.
Join ISE EXPO 2023 in Kansas City, Missouri, and experience why network
professionals from around the globe attend our engaging seminars,
commanding keynote presentations, solutions-based vendors and
face-to-face networking.
More about ISE Expo 2023 (and early bird discounts)
Looking for a good online fiber optic course? The FiberWizards Essentials - CFOT Prep Course could be a solution
How do you get new hires up to speed quickly? Continue training current
employees and prepare them for the certification your customers are
requiring? OJT - On-The-Job-Training. - is the usual answer, but an OJT
program like the FOA's OJT-To-Cert program - requires a commitment from experienced techs and supervisors to ensure the techs stay on course.

FOA Master Instructor and Director Jerry Morla has a solution that can
work for most companies, the "FiberWizards Essentials - CFOT Prep
Course." Students will get lots of flexibility to learn on their
own terms with a very tailored and personalized experience including
one-on-one coaching, virtual presentations, online modules, and access
to a private Slack channel for support.
Students will get a lab kit when they join, to explore behaviors of
light in fiber on their own. If the students need equipment to complete
the hands-on part of the course, FiberWizards offers rentals of
equipment and consumables kits for students within the Continental US.
For companies who need to train their fiber techs but lack the time
commitment needed from their top techs, which is practically all of
them, the FiberWizards course could be a very good - and cost effective -
solution.
FiberWizards Essentials - CFOT Prep Course
|
Technical
Fiber optic
technology, standards, equipment, installation,
etc.
The FOA
Update Page covers the new technology
and applications we covered in this newsletter
recently. Now you can review all that new tech at
once.

Cross Reference To FOA Technical Reference Materials
The FOA has almost 1,000 pages of technical information on the FOA Guide,
100+ videos and two dozen online courses at Fiber U, all this can make
it difficult to find the right information.
Cross Reference To FOA Tech Materials
To help this, we have created a cross reference guide to the textbooks,
Online Guide and Fiber U courses, all the FOA technical information.
Besides the textbooks, online Guide and Fiber U, each section of the
Guide also includes links to the 100+ FOA videos available.
Cross Reference Guide to Textbooks, Online Guide and Fiber U
FOA Videos
We have also rearranged the 100+ FOA videos in similar categories on the
Contents Page of the Online Guide, making the videos, especially the
lectures, much it much easier to find a video on a particular
topic.
FOA Videos Guide.
Want to know more about fiber optics? Study
for FOA certifications? Free
Self-Study Programs are on Fiber
U®
|
OptConn
is a value-add re-seller of optical connectivity products, services and
solutions. With over 30 years of experience in the fiber optics
industry we are here to serve your requirements from fiber optic
training with FOA certification to products, materials and supplies.
We have partnerships with industry leading
manufacturers to support your installation, splicing and testing needs.
Our goal is to guide, support and recognized our client’s requirements.
Learn more about OptConn
|
Problems With Microcables and High Fiber Count Cables?
We're hearing rumors that these cables are getting fibers broken
during installation with the possible cause(s) being exceeding bend
radius or pulling tension, using improper installation equipment or
maybe even the cable designs. We're investigating this and will report
back in the near future. But please ensure installers follow manufacturer's recommendations carefully.
Flexible Ribbons + Air-Blown Fiber (ABF) = Big Advantages for ABF
AIr-blown fiber has been around for over 30 years now
and is a well-proven technology. The concept is simple - install
plastic tubes and blow individual fibers into the tubes. Unlike cables,
upgrades are simple - blow more fibers into the tube or blow current
fibers out and new fibers in.
The new flexible ribbon technology that has led to major density
advances in conventional cables is now being used by Sumitomo in ABF.
This has two advantages - you can now install more fibers in a tube, up
to 72 now with more density being developed - and the advantages of
ribbon splicing for termination - saving about 80% in termination time.

Supporting products are available too - ribbon breakouts to connectors
makes termination easy and fast. Bundles of tubes, even with
optional armor for protection, make installing hundreds or thousands of
fibers simple.
ABF is a technology that should be considered for premises cabling even
in data centers as well as one of the original reasons it was developed,
FTTH.
Read more from Sumitomo.
LC Connector Simplifies Insertion/Removal
LC connectors are quite small and the locking clips
small and hard to use in dense panels. SUNCALL has introduced a version
of the LC that makes insertion and removal much easier.

The new SUNCALL LC Pull Uniboot Connector incorporates a
reinforced boot for a quick push-pull insertion and removal of the
connector (no tabs needed). This new design helps conserve precious
space in high-density panels and the color options assist with
organization. Cable sizes available are 2.0mm and 3.0mm.
Features
“Just Grab It By the Boot” – a reinforced boot for fast insertion & removal
New polarity change within boot, no tools or tabs required
Designed specifically for HD packaging
Read more on the SUNCAL website.
Special For High Level Techs And Engineers:
Standards and Testing Photonic ICs
Point to Multipoint Networks at Infinera
Managing Fiber Optic Projects - The Gantt Chart
(With An Excel File To Make Your Own)
The most common way to track projects is the Gantt Chart, a
chart of activities that tracks the progress of projects along a
timeline. each activity is represented by a bar and the position and
length of the bar represents the starting date and duration of the
activity. This allows you to see what activities are needed for the
project, when the activities start and end so it can be used to track
the progress of the project visually. Here is what a Gantt Chart for a
fiber project might look like:

You might remember an article in the FOA Newsletter in April 2022 or the FOA Guide page on Project Management about the timing of a fiber optic project where we showed the progression of steps in a project like this:
The Gantt Chart above is simply this list converted to a Gantt Chart
using a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. You can download a copy of the FOA Gantt Chart spreadsheet (xlsx file - 16kB)
and use it to create your own Gantt Chart for any project. All you have
to do is to input your own data and change the activity names as
necessary. You can also follow the directions from Microsoft to create your own version.
More Help On Color Codes (Including Copper Cabling And Fiber Optics)
The FOA has created a print-your-own pocket guide to fiber
optic color codes. It has
color codes for fibers and buffer tubes, connectors and premises cables
inside and on the back, QR codes to take you directly to the FOA Guide
and Fiber U.
The FOA
Guide page on Fiber Optic Color Codes is one of the most read pages on the FOA
website and the Fiber Optic Color Codes minicourse on Fiber U very popular also.
Here's a do-it-yourself FOA Guide To Fiber Optic Color Codes card.
Just download the PDF file, print it on a color printer and fold it up
as shown. Then you have your own pocket guide to color codes. Make a
bunch for your co-workers too.

Then we realized that many of your also do structured cabling
work, so it was a natural to add a Color Code Guide for UTP copper
cabling in printable (below) and electronic (above) versions.

But we did not stop there. We know how many of you use your mobile devices on the job, so we created a version of the Color Code Guide you could download
and use on your smartphone or tablet. It's a PDF file, so you just
download it and save it on your device and it will be with you always.
Here are the links to download your own FOA Guides to Fiber Optic Color Codes
FOA Guide to Fiber Optic Color Codes (print your own version) PDF
FOA Guide to Fiber Optic Color Codes (electronic version for your smartphone, tablet or PC) PDF
And For UTP Cabling
FOA Guide to UTP Cabling Color Codes (print your own version) PDF
FOA Guide to UTP Copper Cabling Color Codes (electronic version) PDF
Warning For Techs Doing OSP Restoration

FOA received an inquiry about whether techs
working on restoring OSP links should be concerned about eye safety if
the link used fiber amplifiers. To answer this question, we had to do some research on fiber amplifiers.
The short answer is YES, you should be concerned. The long answer is
more technical and includes details that every OSP tech needs to know.
See "Fiber Amps And Restoration" in the FOA Newsletter Archives..
Try The FOA's Online
Loss Budget Calculator
FOA
has written many articles about loss budgets,
something everyone involved in fiber optics needs to
know and needs to know how to calculate. We've
created a online Loss Budget Calculator that does
the work for you. Just input your cable plant data
and it calculates the loss budget. It works on any
device, especially smartphones and tablets for field
use and even allows printing the results.

Bookmark
this page (especially on your smartphone): FOA Loss Budget Calculator
Online
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Worth Reading
Each month we read
hundreds of newsletters and online articles. These
are the ones we think you will find "worth
reading."
FOA has a web page with resources on fiber broadband networks and the IIJA/BEAD funding programs.
Cross Reference Guide to FOA Textbooks, Online Guide and Fiber U
AT&T PR photo from the mid 1970s
The FOA's History
|
Worth Reading (And
Watching):
May 2923
Do You Believe In Magic? Sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. Jim Hayes's column in March/April ISE Magazine.
After federal investment, supply chain jams and labor shortages still hinder tribal broadband access - Marketplace on Public Radio
Fiber To The Office (FTTO) On A College Campus In The Netherlands - NEXANS
Bipartisan Push To Make Broadband Grants Tax Exempt Moves Forward - ILSR COmmunity Networks (Something overlooked in the original program!)
Special For High Level Techs And Engineers:
Standards and Testing Photonic ICs
Point to Multipoint Networks at Infinera
April 2023
Telegeography Submarine Cable Map 2023 - You can also buy copies - Telegeography

Taiwan suspects Chinese ships cut islands’ internet cables - Los Angeles Times
Broadband Communities Summit Conference, Houston, May 1-4, 2023
March 2023
CABL® (cabl.com) serves
the business needs of the Broadband industry (including traditional
cable TV, fiber, telecom and satellite providers) with employment
listings, classified ads, discussion forums, and more. A contractor told us it's where they find lots of opportunities for subcontracting.
The State of the Network in 2023 (eBook) Telegeography
From Telegeography' The State of the Network in 2023
The Secret to Future Proofing, by Jim Hayes, FOA President, ISE Magazine
Open Access Conduit in West Des Moines, Iowa Brings Google Fiber, Choice to City Residents (Dig once - buy conduit!) ILSR Community Networks
Emergency Repair of Subsea Fiber Optic Cable in Anguilla (LinkedIn)
February 2023
Friday the 13th Mapping Challenge Deadline Highlights Failed Process -
The new national broadband map challenge process - crucial for future
infrastructure funding - looks to have been hamstrung by critical
lacking information from the start, and that has us worried.
Ask The Experts: What Defined The Industry in 2022? Telegeography
Review Telegeography's Presentation On the 2022 Fiber Optic Market
January 2023
The 45 Year Old Overnight Sensation - article by FOA President Jim Hayes in ISE Magazine (Read the complete Nov/Dec issue of ISE Magazine here.

Going
the distance: What you need to know about breaking the 100-meter
distance limitation Cheating on the standards for UTP cable - CI&M Magazine
FCC Requires Broadband Providers to Display Broadband Nutrition Labels not
nutrition labels on the product's "high fiber content" but key
information consumers want−prices, speeds, fees, data allowances, and
other critical information.- Broadband Communities
Fiber
optics take the pulse of the planet It’s like radar, but with light.
Distributed acoustic sensing — DAS — picks up tremors from volcanoes,
quaking ice and deep-sea faults, as well as traffic rumbles and whale
calls. Knowable Magazine.
From Earlier Issues
ESRI has created an ebook on GIS location technology for telecom. Use the link to download the book.
The First Transcontinental Telephone Line
began operation on July 29th in 1915 - 3400 miles between New
York and San Francisco - required over 100,000 telephone poles! Wonders
of World Engineering
Conocimiento Esencial: ¿Por qué la fibra óptica? creado por FiberWizards
Recruiting And Training Today's Fiber Optic Workforce - Learn the fundamentals to recruit and train new fiber optics - by FOA's Jim Hayes in ISE Magazine.
Explosive Fiber Broadband Expansion Drives Need for Fiber Technician Training Programs
- Telecompetitor - As fiber sees record-setting deployment levels, the
demand for fiber optic technicians is stronger than ever.
Google Video On Their Undersea Cables YouTube Slick but interesting video on how undersea cables are designed, built and used.
Construction Without Disruption - FOA President Jim Hayes' column in ISE Magazine
Fiber Optics Installed By The Lowest Bidder - ISE Magazine - by Jim Hayes, FOA President.
Building Broadband During Component and Worker Shortages
- Broadband Communities - Completing broadband builds requires
competent fiber optic techs, but training them requires understanding
how they learn - by Jim Hayes, FOA President.
Worth Reading - Magazines, Websites and Newsletters

The
latest Issue of
dP-PRO, the "call before you dig" magazine, is
online.
dpPro sponsors the annual digging safety conference each year - next year in Tampa.

New Fiber Optic
Magazine In Spanish
Todo Fibra Optica is
a new digital magazine in Spanish for fiber optics
in Latin America and South America. Jose Enriquez, editor of Todo
Fibra Optic magazine has many years
experience in the fiber optic industry so he knows
the industry well. FOA will be working with him to
share our extensive technical materials in Spanish.
Read their newsletter here. It is now available online in English and Spanish.

All issues and subscriptions.
Contact:
José Manuel Enriquez Mora, Editor
Todo Fibra Optica LLC
https://todofibraoptica.com/revista-ediciones/
+52 222 302 8224
jose.enriquez@todofibraoptica.com
RTI Telecom Magazine from Brazil, in Portuguese. A revista RTI do mês de abril já está disponível online e recomendo a leitura de alguns artigos:
1995-2020
- FOA's 25th Anniversary!
As
part of celebrating 25 years of serving the fiber
optic industry as its primary source of technical
information and independent certifying body, FOA
thought it appropriate to create a short history of
the organization and how it has developed to
help the fiber optic industry. We also wanted to
recognize the contributions many people have made to
the organization over the years that made FOA what
it is today.
The FOA history is now archived on the FOA
website where you can read it anytime or link to
it. Updated
info - dB, total internal reflection and science
projects,
Worth Reading - News
Summary - Past Links Worth Repeating
1983
Video of AT&T's First Test Of A Submarine
Cable System From the AT&T Tech
Channel archives (worth exploring!)
Richard
Epworth's Optical Fiber History from his work
at STL from 1966 with Charles Kao.
Communications Systems Grounding
Rules: Article 800 provides specific
requirements by
Michael
Johnston, NECA Executive Director of
Standards and Safety in EC Magazine
US Broadband Coverage By Service
Provider from the FCC
How
To Build Rural Broadband, Learning From History
In the August 2021
FOA Newsletter, we published a lengthy article on
rural broadband and compared it to rural
electrification in America in the last century.
Much of the comparison was based on an article
written in 1940 by a USDA economist, Robert Beall,
called "Rural Electrification."
If
you are interested in or involved in rural
broadband, we recommend you read the article "How
To Build Rural Broadband, Learning From History"
in the August 2021 FOA Newsletter and
read the Beall article also.
Recycling Fiber Optic
Cable - Contact:
Steve Maginnis
LD4Recycle/ CommuniCom Recycling
(Visit
website)
sm@LD4Recycle.com
803.371.5436
Sumitomo's Ribbon
Splicing Guide - download from
one of the leaders in splicing.
"Who Lost Lucent?: The
Decline of America's Telecom Equipment Industry"
This is a MUST READ for managers in telecom or any
industry!
This long and
well-researched and annotated article in American
Affairs Journal should be mandatory reading
for every high level manager in a telecom company -
or any other company for that matter. To summarize
the article, today, America has no major telecom
equipment company and fears the major suppliers of
equipment who are all foreign, especially the Huawei
from China. This article explains how America got
into this deplorable state.
OFS also has an excellent
website and blog of tech articles worth browsing.
IEC 60050 - International
Electrotechnical Vocabulary - An
extensive dictionary for fiber optics in English and
French. Highly technical - this is one definition:
"mode - one solution of Maxwell's equations,
representing an electromagnetic field in a certain
space domain and belonging to a family of
independent solutions defined by specified boundary
conditions"
If you are interested in restoration -
aren't we all? - you should also read this
article in dpPro magazine by FOA President Jim
Hayes: Damage Protection Requies
Looking Overheas As Well As Underground
- dpPRO Magazine - about the problems with
aerial cables. His previous article for the
magazine was New Techniques for Fiber
Optic Installation.
How much fiber optic cable is
manufactured each year? CRU Reports -
unsurprisingly China is by far the largest market
today
The Institute for Local
Self-Reliance weekly newsletter has
lots of interesting articles and links.
Universal access to broadband
is a cornerstone to a strong economy,
Achieving universal access will require
community partnerships. by Alfreda
B. Norman, Sr. VP, Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas
FIBER TO THE FARM: The
co-ops that electrified Depression-era farms are
now building rural internet. Be sure to check out
the high-tech equine installation equipment.
Next Century Cities Newsletter
- News from cities around the US
including Detroit and New York plus small
Infrastructure Get Some
Respect, NY TImes "On Tech"
"The magic of the internet requires a lot of
very boring stuff behind the scenes. "
DIRT
Report On Damage To Utilities Common Ground
Alliance (CGA) annual DIRT report provides a
summary and analysis of the events submitted into
CGA’s Damage Information Reporting Tool (DIRT) for
the year 2018. The complete report is available
for download here. In addition,
there is an interactive dashboard that
allows users to filter the data more by
factors contributing to damages.
Structured Cabling News
- a website and weekly newsletter about cabling.
Fiber Trivia From
Corning.
The
Future Of Work Is Skills - So Stop Worrying
About Degrees - The
reality is the future of work is about skills, not
just degrees. (FOA Newsletter Feb 2020)
The job market is hot. So why
are half of U.S. grads missing out?
VIAVI Books On
Fiber Optic Testing (2 volumes) - They're back!

Besides
the FOA reference materials, two JDSU/VIAVI
textbooks, Reference Guide to Fiber Optic Testing,
Volumes 1 and 2, were used as references for
some of the FOA courses and are recommended for
instructors and students. The books are available
from VIAVI as eBooks and the everyone should
download them and recommend them to others.Download
yours now. Volume 1. Volume 2. Viavi Books
Ciena's Submarine Cable
Handbooks (4 to download)
Guidebook To MPO
Testing OptoTest
offers this complete guide to MTP®/MPO testing. In
this guide, you will learn all there is to know
about the different test methods, equipment
options, troubleshooting, and best maintenance
practices to ensure that you have the best testing
experience. Go here to download the book.
50th Anniversary of The
Development of Low Loss Fibers A history
of the development of low loss fiber, a fascinating
story by Jeff Hecht on the OSA (Optical Society of
America) website.
How OFS Makes Fiber
Interesting YouTube video on how fiber is made.
Perhaps a little too much "show biz" but
fascinating. If you have ever seen fiber
manufacture, look at this video. You will be amazed
at how big preforms have become!
The True Cost of Telco Damages
(what backhoe fade or target practice can
cost)
Rural Electric Cooperatives:
Pole Attachment Policies and Issues, June 2019.
Clearfield-FOA Certification
Training Clearfield is now offering
their customers an FOA
CERTIFICATION course. This course
provides a basic understanding of fiber optic
technology, as well as Clearfield product
knowledge and how Clearfield’s integrated product
systems work together in a fiber network.
Substandard Contractors - Fiber
Optic Knowledge Doesn't Always Trickle
Down (EC Mag)
|
Q&A
When readers ask us questions, we genrally refer them to FOA
resources where they can find the answer to their question and many
more. We first send them to the FOA Guide
which is the table of contents for the FOA technical resources. There
they can find pages indexed by topic and a search engine for the FOA
website. It also links them to FOA videos and courses on our free online learning site Fiber U.
The FOA
Fiber FAQs Page (FAQs = frequently asked
questions) gathers up questions readers have
asked us (which first ran in this newsletter)
and adds tech topics of general interest.
|
Good Question!
Tech
Questions/Comments From FOA Newsletter Readers
May 2023
Reflectance Testing
Q: Do you know whether anyone has compared the reflectance
measurement determine by the OTDR calculation to that make with a
reflectance test set?
A: Measuring reflectance/return loss is a complex task
requiring measurement over a high dynamic range with limited accuracy.
We devoted a 15 page chapter to it in the testing book. The problem is
establishing a reference - like most other tests - but the uncertainty
is probably no better than +/-3dB.
Here is a place where the OTDR measurement is probably the preferred
method because the test is made with mated connectors compared to the
backscatter background and the meter/source/spitter measurement has to
compensate for cable lengths and the reflectance from the far end of the
mated cable which needs termination (dip in index matching fluid) to
prevent that reflectance from affecting the measurement.
Testing OM2/3/4 Multimode Fiber
Q: Is there any loss concerns when mating an OM2 fiber to an OM4 fiber (vs using the same type only).
The question applies to both use of an LED source and an VCSEL laser
source. We can assume it is only for short fiber lengths (< 25meters)
A: OM2, OM3 and OM4 fibers have the same basic specifications.
Based on this specification, the two fibers are geometrically identical
and there should be no difference between them.
However, about 10 years ago, multimode fiber was introduced with
bend-insensitive structure.
https://foa.org/tech/ref/fiber/BIfiber.html Today almost all
multimode fiber is bend-insensitive. Earlier MM fibers, including the
OM2 fibers, are not bend-insensitive. Unlike SM fiber, where
bend-insensitive singlemode fiber is given an different designation -
G.652 becomes G.657 - multimode fiber is not differentiated between
regular and bend-insensitive, cables are not marked, and it takes a
knowledgeable tech with a microscope to tell the difference.
Until recently, testing standards called for test reference cables to be
non-BI fiber because the early BI fibers simply added a lower index
trench around the core to capture the lost modes which gave them a
larger core diameter and higher effective NA and these fibers did not
respond the same way to traditional mandrel wrap mode filters - in fact
the specified mandrel wrap had virtually no effect at all. When non-BI
fibers were tested with BI fibers, the effective core diameters produced
directional loss effects. Over a decade, MMF manufacturers learned more
about BI fiber structure and modified the index profile of the fiber to
essentially make BI fiber about the same as non-BI fiber. In addition,
mode control was changed to encircled flux controlled sources instead of
mandrel wrap mode filters, which was more effective with both
fibers.
So recently, MM testing standards have changed. You can use whatever 50/125 fiber you have to test OM2, OM3 and OM4 fiber.
Fiber On Road Markings?
Q: Can this work? Intergrate fibre into road marking ie
white line/double line . Have a very low profile skid resistant duct
that replaces the line markings.
Every street can have a fibre connection from the main backbone. The
fibre can be used to feed line markers for traffic, warn of impending
incidences and used for colour coding speed limits.
A: Google Fiber tried something like that in Louisville, KY. It did not turn out well.
https://www.foa.org/foanl-3-19.html
Starting A FIber Business
Q: Where would I take a workshop about how to start my own
fiber business? How to start, what you need, where to buy, what
machinery? Anything like that exist?
A: Starting a fiber optic business is basically like starting
any other business. There are many local classes for business owners
about starting and running a business at community colleges or
other educational groups. If you are already involved in fiber optics,
you should have contacts for tools. equipment and components. If you are
not familiar with the fiber optic business already, we’d recommend you
get a few years experience in the field first.
Course On OSP & OSP Construction
Q: Do you offer a course geared towards newer OSP engineers
that covers the different network architecture options, aerial vs.
underground network topologies, splicing diagrams, theory, equipment,
jargon, etc. ?
A: FOA has courses on Fiber U on both OSP & OSP
Construction. Many of our schools offer courses on Design or OSP
installation, but we do not have many that offer OSP Construction
courses due to the facilities needed. We have a program in process but
few schools have the resources to offer it.
April 2023
Electromagnetic Interference
Q: Is there and electromagnetic interference with optic cables?
A: The fiber is glass and the cable is plastic, neither of
which are affected by electromagnetic interference. There is a cable
used in electrical transmission lines called OPGW- optical power ground
wire - that has fiber inside a wire conducting high voltage - doesn’t
bother the fiber at all.
Bandwidth Issues
Q: We are having transmission problems on long fiber runs with mixes of fiber types. Ideas?
A: Perhaps the problem is simply the total bandwidth of the fiber. If
the long spans are G.652, it will probably have CD and perhaps PMD
issues. It’s worth doing fiber characterization tests on it. See this
page in the FOA Guide: https://foa.org/tech/ref/testing/test/CD_PMD.html If you are over 100G, coherent transmission might overcome the problems with bandwidth.
Can we get the following information from OTDR tests?
1. Attenuation
Yes, see https://foa.org/tech/ref/testing/OTDR/OTDR.html
2. Chromatic dispersion (Need some help )
On some special OTDRs with mulitple wavelengths - see https://foa.org/tech/ref/testing/test/CD_PMD.html
3. Polarisation mode dispersion (Need some help)
Not on any we know about. Also see https://foa.org/tech/ref/testing/test/CD_PMD.html
March 2023
Fiber Optic Network Maintenance
Q: I am in the middle of building a set of
documents for Fiber Optic Internet Services and one of the areas needed
is a template for supporting the outside plant facilities. Might there
be a template of must-haves for any service provider or municipality to
have as part of their maintenance agreements once the network build and
construction is finished?
A: That’s a good topic to cover in
agreements. When people ask us what maintenance fiber optic networks
need, we usually tell them “build it, lock it up and forget it.” In
other words what some people have suggested for maintenance for fiber
optic networks, like periodic testing or cleaning of connectors, is more
likely to cause damage than help. Preparing for restoration, however,
is vitally important. Every day several fiber optic cables are cut by
other construction.
Here are a few links from the FOA Guide that may be useful:
Fiber Optic Network Management (For Managers)
User's Guide To Fiber Optic Networks
Maintenance
Restoration (planning & implementing)
Converting RF To Fiber
Q: I would like to convert our SATCOM
System to RFoF. Currently we use our antenna to receive from 2 RF
ports on the antenna, DC-6Ghz, and 6-20Ghz. We also have other
antennas that are configured to do DC - 1Ghz, and 1-Ghz. Currently
we are doing testing with an RfOptic RFoF converter on the 1-6Ghz with
great results. Currently we are just doing lab testing as our
operational systems are all RF with COAX.
A: Converting from coax to fiber is
generally easy because the application is widespread and components easy
to get. The model for what you are doing might be the Fiber to the
Antenna (FTTA) application for the wireless services. See this for an
example: https://www.opticalzonu.com/solutions/uhfandvhf/
Documenting Fiber Optic Cable Plants
Q: I am looking for information or
training materials on documentation standards for OSP cable. We
currently have a number of large backbone cables along with mid span
cables. I know companies like the phone company labels each cable
with a number and terminals off of the mid span drop with the specific
pair numbers. Is there a standard way to label each cable, mid
span cable, splice box, terminal, etc.?
A: The usual way is to document every
fiber in every cable with a fiber designation, color code and
connections on each end. There are some standards on numbering schemes
but most companies I know use their own designations created as they got
started. There are software packages that will do this work,
simplifying the process,
February 2023
FOA Technical Materials Updates
Q: How often are FOA courses (such as
CFOS/D) updated? And when they get updated, what happens to those who
would have done a previous version?
A: The FOA knowledge base is updated continuously, reflected
first in the FOA Guide online (FOA Guide), then in the curriculum
materials for courses at our FOA Approved training organizations and
Fiber U (Fiber U). Textbooks are updated every few years, generally just
tech updates, but sometimes with major additions like the large section
on OSP construction added into the OSP book.
If you took your certification a few years ago, there are new courses at
Fiber U and a FOA Update Page that we use for new information that was
first published in the newsletter. And of course reading the FOA Monthly
Newsletter FOA News will help keep you up to date on fiber optic tech
and applications.
Measuring Short Cables WIth A Long Launch Cable
Q: Is it correct to measure a 300m fiber
optic last mile with a 2Km launch cable? I think it is not, but I’d like
to hear your comments.
A: Why would you think it is not correct?
Q: A 2Km launch box must be used with a 20uS pulse width, to
eliminate the dead zone. Shorter pulse widths are too “weak” so the OYDR
will not reach the end of the link. That’s why I think it’s not correct
using the 2Km launch box in links shorter than 80Km/90Km.
A: You have cause and effect reversed. If you are trying to
measure a very long fiber, 80-90km, you need a lot of power in the OTDR
pulse, so you use a very wide pulse. In order to get past the dead zone
with that long pulse, you need a long launch cable, like 2 km. But if
you are trying to measure a short cable, say 300m, you use a very short
pulse, 5ns or so, for higher resolution. The OTDR range would only need
to be a few km, so the shorter pulse works. As long as the OTDR range is
longer than the launch cable plus the cable to test, it’s perfectly OK.
A shorter launch cable would work and might even allow a shorter test
pulse for higher resolution, but the length of the launch cable only
needs to be long enough to reach past the dead zone and allow measuring
the cable you want to test.
January 2023
Fiber In Antarctica
Q: Does anyone know if there is any cable solution to be
installed in Antarctica? The climatic conditions involve installing the
cable directly on the ground, withstanding temperatures as low as -30°
Celsius.
A: There have been fiber optic cables in the Antarctic for over
25 years. In the 1990s, the fiber optic test equipment company FOTEC
built a computerized test system that was installed at
Amundsen-Scott base to test about a half-dozen cables over the winter.
All worked fine. A few years ago we met the engineer who installed it at
a conference. She told me some of those cables were still being used.
December 2022
Seeing Splices On OTDR Traces
Q: The reason why I am reaching out is because the CEI is
having trouble understanding that not all trace files will show splices.
As we both know that means that there is low loss and the network will
work more efficiently. I was wondering if you could possibly help give a
more in depth explanation so everyone can understand why they are not
seeing splices.
A: Nothing in fiber optics is more confusing that an OTDR trace!
First it is necessary to understand how the OTDR measures loss, so start
on this page in the FOA Guide:
https://foa.org/tech/ref/testing/OTDR/OTDR.html When you get about 3/4
down the page, there is a section called “OTDR Measwurement
Uncertainty” that explains the way a splice loss is measured and
the uncertainty of the measurement caused by the difference in
backscatter coefficient in the two fibers being spliced.
Next consider how a splice is made - fusing or welding two fibers
together. The typical loss of the splice is under 0.1 dB. The difference
in fiber backscatter can cause directional loss variations higher that
the loss of the splice. If the difference in backscatter is 0.1 dB and
the splice loss is 0.1 dB, in one direction it will show 0 dB loss and
in the other directin it will show 0.2 dB loss, so the average is about
right, 0.1 dB. This is of course how we get “gainers” when the
backscatter difference is much higher than the splice loss.
But also consider this. The OTDR digitizes the signals in both axes. If
the dB range shown is 40dB and the digitization is 10 bits, each bit
represents 0.04 dB. A good fusion splice can be so small, the OTDR
cannot detect it because it is less than 1 bit of the measurement
resolution.
This is the reason we tell people that documentation is so important. If
you know where the splice is, you can look for it and pat yourself on
the back if you can’t find it because you are so good at splicing!
What is the application for 10G to the home?
Q: What is the application for 10G to the
home? Streaming 4K requires 25M, even a family of 8, each watching
their own program would only require 200M.
A: The use of 10G is not just for bragging rights. With 10G,
you can serve up to 256 (or sometimes more) users, making it a viable
alternative for very dense populations. Of course, it can also serve
fewer business users who want higher bandwidth than regular GPON.
Utility damages slightly increased since 2019, per DIRT Report
The Common Ground Alliance (CGA) recently announced the findings from
its 2021 Damage Information Reporting Tool (DIRT) Report, and the datas
indicates that damages have increased since 2019.
November 2022
Fiber Characterization
Q: After installing a long haul backbone
fibre, what tests are required on the fibre plant to ensure optimum
performance of DWDM. (I understand the need for having OTDR traces.) Are
there any FOA Guides that explore such tests?
A: FOA has a page in the FOA Guide covering this kind of testing - it’s called “fiber characterization.” The page is Fiber Characterization and Testing long haul networks (CD, PMD, Spectral Attenuation)
Mating Cycles
Q: I’m a NASA contractor and recently we came across a interesting
and yet perplexing question. Does a connector lose a mate cycle
every time we put it under the scope for a cleanliness inspection?
We want to catalogue each time we lose a mating cycle and wondered if
that counted as well.
A: No you would not lose a mating cycle. The connector is well
separated from the lens of the microscope. If they touched, it would
disturb any dirt on the end of the connector you were trying to inspect
and get the microscope lens dirty. A mating cycle is only when mated to
another connector - PC and APC connectors have contact between the
polished fiber ends and that is what causes wear. Microscopes should not
cause mating, not should most power meters for testing, but test
sources and meters with fiber pigtails for connections would count as a
mating cycle.
Removing Data Center Cables
Q: I’m wrecking out fiber optic cables at the data center.
They get very tangled if the connectors are intact. Co-workers are
cutting the connectors off to make pulling the fiber optic cables
through the fiber troughs easier. I was concerned about fiber shards
when connectors are cut off.
A: Cutting off connectors should not produce fiber shards. The
plastic coatings on the fiber should keep that from happening. It is OK
to cut off connectors or cut the cables into shorter lengths to ease the
removal of tangled cables.
Connecting OS1/OS2 SM Fiber
Q: Can OS1 and OS2 fibers be cross-connected? Application is
for low bandwidth devices with a maximum of 1GB Ethernet connections.
A: OS1 and. OS2 (G.652) fibers are essentially the same
geometrically; the only difference is the manufacturing of OS2 removes
the water molecules that cause the water peak at 1244 and 1383 nm.
FTTH Software
Q: Do you have any recommendations on FTTH software? A search shows a
dozen or more offerings but I don’t know anyone using them. Are you
familiar with any?
A: We asked several people who are knowledgeable on software and here is what they said:
It would depend on the application or what you need the software for…
- For GIS based mapping: Esri
- For fiber network management systems (FNMS [design/planning and operations]): OSPinsight or Vetro
- For automated HL design: OSPInsight as well as Biarri
- For Tier 1 type telecom operator FNMS with
BSS/OSS integration: Ericsson NE (Networks) which was based on old
Tirks. Another is NetCracker.
- For GIS enabled construction / project Management: Vitruvi
If I had to start a small to mid sized FTTH system, I would consider ESRI and OSPInsight.
October 2022
How Light travels In An Optical Fiber
Q: Is there a generalised ratio between
the length of an optic fibre and the length of the path actually taken
by a light pulse inside that fibre? If yes, do OTDRs factor in such
differences in any way? or they such sown the length of the actual path
of the light pulses?
A: Each optical fiber has an effective
independent of refraction. The index of refraction is the ratio of the
speed of light to the speed of light in the material: n=c/v where
n=index of refraction, c=speed of light in a vacuum and v=speed of light
in the fiber.
For an optical fiber, the manufacturer measures the index of refraction
which is usually in the range of 1.47. Corning SMF-28 singlemdoe fiber
for example is specified at 1.4670 @ 1310 nm and 1.4677 @ 1550 nm.
So if you use the equation above, the speed of light in SMF-28 fiber for
a 1310nm pulse is c/n or 300,000 km/s divided by 1.4670 = 204,500 km/s.
When an OTDR measures length, it actually measures the time its test
pulse takes to go to the end of the fiber and return, so the distance is
2X the actual fiber length. The distance is speed x time.
If a fiber is 1 km long and the speed is 204,500 km/s, the time
forlight to travel the 1km is 1/204500 = 0.00000489 seconds or about 5
milliseconds.
OTDR will measure that fiber as 10 ms becasue its pulse has to go both
ways, and it would calculate the length as i km, using that effective
index of refraction of 1.4670.
Back to your original question, the index of refraction is the generalized number based on how light travels in the fiber.
Excess Cable In Ducts
Q: Do you have any established characterization on the
ratio of the length of optic fibre to the length of its duct (to account
for twisting of the fibre inside the duct).
A: The cable after pulling into the duct and no longer under
tension will be about 1-2% longer. And remember the fiber is about 1%
longer than the cable.
Slack/Service Loops In Manholes
Q: What is the recommended percentage of slack left in manholes for longhaul transmission links?
A: Not so much a percentage as actual length. If it includes a
splice, the fiber which will be stored in service loops need to be long
enough to conveniently do the splicing outside the manhole - typically
10-15m for each cable. If there is no splice but just provision to pull
the cable back down conduit to repair a dig-up during restoration, the
distances should be about the same or maybe a bit longer - say 20m of
cable..
Do APC Connectors Show Reflectance On An OTDR Trace?
Q: I was testing a 500meter cable with
1000m launch. In the first event the otdr sensed a splice loss instead
of a connector and reflectance. The connector is APC . Is it possible to
have no reflectance at all. Pulse at 10ns and duration of 15secs.
A: A good APC connector can show no reflectance. One of our
instructors who wrote the OTDR training course when he was at AT&T
did some tests for FOA a few years ago. Here are two traces that show
the reflectance is so low it is in the noise of the trace.


September 2022
Splicing Pigtails On A Cable
Q: I seem to be having an issue finding fiber protection sleeves
that can slide over the 3mm patch cable. I bought a sleeve that said it
with made for “single fiber fusion” but the thru hole which I would
side the cable thru prior to fusion is too small for the patch cable.
When I try and look on-line for specifications for the thru-hole size,
prior to fusion final melting of the glue in the sleeve, all I find are
post-melting diameters, none which are even close to being able to
handle the 3mm patch cable.
A: Splicing pigtails involves splicing the fibers only and the
cables are secured separately. The usual method of splicing on pigtails
is to splice the fibers and use the heat shrink tube to seal the splice
and the fibers from the outside air and protect it from stress. The
splice is placed in a splice tray. On either side, there is 2-3 feet of
fiber exposed from the cables being spliced. The splice tray has clamps
for all of the cables being spliced on the edges of the tray and the
fiber to the splice is coiled neatly on the splice tray. The jacket of
the pigtail is clamped at the edge of the splice tray but ends there,
so only fiber is coiled in the tray. If you try to coil fiber, the bulk
of the cable can get to be a problem where it’s coiled with the bare
fiber. You can get heat shrink protectors for fibers of 250 to 900 micron diameter buffers, but not for jacketed cables.
Important Questions From The Past
Managing And Maintaining a Fiber Optic Cable Plant During Its Lifetime.
Q: Are there guides / recommendations for optic fibre cable
life cycle management? (outside plant) including rehabilitation /
replacement timelines together with factors that may alter those
timelines ( such as seismic activity, extreme weather, human
activity-induced fibre cuts etc) also including typical performance
deterioration over the life cycle, and the performance levels at which
replacement / rehabilitation happens. Or does it happen (and is it
normally expected) that operators replace entire sections of fibre (say
400 km) as part of routine maintenance?
A: There is a saying here in the US that in fiber optics “the most common cause of failure is “backhoe fade” in underground cables
and “target practice” for aerial cables.” In other words, damage
caused by humans. We know of many fiber optic cable plants that have
survived natural disasters like earthquakes - in fact there is a lot of
work today using regular cables used in communications to monitor for
seismic activity. Fire can be a problem in remote areas, but often it’s
because the poles are burned causing the cables to fall.
Over the years we have questioned cable manufacturers about the lifetime
of fiber optic cable. They don’t like to make definitive statements but
we have been told that based on the cables installed in the past that
40 years is a probable lifetime for most cables. There are certainly
cables in use today that are over 30 years old already. The glass fiber
is not a problem, it’s the protection from the cables that will
eventually fail. Installation techniques can have an effect on the
longevity. For example splice closures should be sealed properly to
prevent ingress of moisture or dirt. Cables should not be installed with
bends below the rated bend radius or with excess tension.
FOA has always told users that fiber optic cables do not need maintenance (https://foa.org/tech/ref/user/maintain.html),
a response to some people advocating periodic inspection and cleaning
of connections, for example. That’s just more likely to cause damage.
When an accidental break in a cable occurs, we have guidelines for restoration (https://foa.org/tech/ref/restoration/rest.html), and planning for restoration when building the cable plant is very important.
Someday you will certainly want to replace cables, often well before the
lifetime of the cable, but generally because you need more fiber or the
older fiber will not support the network speeds you want for upgrades.
Planning for more fiber by installing more cables can be eased by
installing spare underground ducts when first installing cables - here
in the US, we call this “Dig Once” (https://foa.org/tech/ref/OSP_Construction/Underground_Construction.html). Testing fibers for higher speeds is called "fiber Characterization” (https://foa.org/tech/ref/testing/test/CD_PMD.html) and is routinely done when speeds above 10G or certainly 100G are considered for older fibers.
Knowing that the lifetime of fiber optic cable plants are ~40
years, it makes sense to plan ahead for future applications, installing
lots of fibers, leaving lots of open duct space and choosing network
architectures that will not obstruct upgrades. See the article on
Netly's network above.
Fiber Optic Color Codes Reference Chart
Q: Has anyone made a fiber optic pocket reference chart that has cable
color orders, frequencies, or other commonly used info on it?
A: The FOA has a page on its Online Guide that covers color codes
(https://foa.org/tech/ColCodes.htm). It is the most popular page in the
FOA Guide! It works great with a smartphone.

The
word on the "Dig Once" program is getting out - FOA
is getting calls from cities asking us for
information and advice. Here are some links:
The DoT page on the administration’s Executive
Order: http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/policy/otps/exeorder.cfm
And the
one to download and hand out:
A “How To” Guide from The Global Connect Initiative:
https://share.america.gov/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/6.-GCI-Dig-Once.pdf
Is There A Standard
For Fiber Optic Installation?
Another
question we get often is "Is there a standard for
fiber optic installation." The answer is yes, but
not from the usual standards groups you might
expect. Over 20 years ago, the National Electrical
Contractors Association (NECA) asked FOA to help
create a standard for installation. That standard,
ANSI/NECA/FOA-301 has been updated three times
already and is about ready for another update.
Unlike most of those groups who charge you a fortune
for standards, FOA covers the cost so ANSI/NECA/FOA-301
is available free from FOA.

Download your free copy of ANSI/NECA/FOA-301
here (PDF)
Older
questions are now available here.
|
Training / FiberU
News and resources to help you learn more and stay
updated.
Find a
listing of all the FOA-Approved schools here.

Free online
self-study programs on many fiber optics and
cabling topics are available at Fiber U, FOA's
online web-based training website.
Free online training at
Fiber U
The FOA has >100
videos on |
FOA School News
FOA's roster of approved schools is growing as more organizations
recognize our expertise in workforce development and our comprehensive
support for getting new schools started. FOA has over 25 years
experience and nearly 90,000 certified fiber techs (with ~120,000
certifications). As a non-profit organization founded by the industry
specifically to develop a competent workforce, FOA provides the
consultation, curriculum and contacts to get schools started as a free
service to new schools.
Welcome #5 in Ohio
This month FOA welcomes Washington County Career Center as our 5th
school in Ohio. Last year, the Governor's office held a formal ceremony
to announce the opening of a FOA school at Tri-County Career Center (FOA Newsletter September 2021.)
Washington County Career Center is the latest addition to the network
and two more are coming shortly. Soon Ohio will catch up with Kentucky
with 9 KCTCS schools in the FOA network.
Telecom Fiji
Andy Edwards of CommsLearning Limited emailed us as he was preparing to
head home to New Zealand that he had just spent time training personnel
at Telecom Fiji - 55 CFOT’s trained, 6 Designers and 4 instructors who
can deliver CFOT
internally with certifications going via
CommsLearning. Details above.
FOA Network Of
Approved Schools Continues To Grow
The
need for more fiber optic networks to support
fiber broadband and wireless/5G networks has led to a
strong demand for more trained and FOA-certified
techs, and that has led to a demand for more
training organizations. FOA has been adding new
schools and certifying new instructors to meet the
demand.
Schools added
recently:
School 775 INCITEL-UNI Lima Peru
School 406 Fiber Cert Santa Barbara, CA
School 404 Artison Technical Services, Waldorf, MD
School 403: Washington County Career Center
School 774: Arrow For Engineering, Amman, Jordan
School #401: Western Wyoming Community CollegeSchool 399: Team Fishel, Virginia
School 398, Telecom Tech, Colorado
School 396 Optconn, Boston, MA
School 395 Fiber Wizards
(Knowledge on Demand LLC)
School 393,
Carolina's Solution Group
School 394,
Tri-County Career Center, Nelsonville, Ohio
School
388: Global Com of Sterling, Virginia, USA
School 389. CWA-JATC Telecom Training Center, San
Jose, CA
School 390 Northern Allied Communications,
Nespelem, WA
School 391 Lewis-Clark State College,
Lewiston, ID
School 392 Wallace Community College, Dothan,
AL
Complete listing of FOA Approved Training Organizations
Need A Fiber Optic Course Onsite? Invite an FOA School To Come To You
FOA often gets inquiries from an organization that
has personnel that needs training in fiber optics. Recent inquiries have
included contractors, a manufacturer of high-reliability products using
fiber optics and a cable manufacturer. In many cases, where there are
several people needing training, FOA can recommend a FOA Approved School
and Certified Instructor who will come to their location to teach a
class. The advantage is of course the savings in travel costs if
the class comes to you, but it also offers the opportunity to customize
the course to fit your needs, even use your equipment or work on your
components, so the training is more relevant to those taking the class.
Contact FOA to discuss the idea of a custom, on-site class to see if it will better meet your needs.
Fiber U
On-The-Job Training (OJT) Program
The
FOA Fiber U OJT program for novices combines online study at
Fiber U with OJT with mentoring by experienced
co-workers and their supervisor to help new employees
develop into FOA-certified technicians in only
one year.

The FOA Fiber U “OJT-To-Cert”
program includes both fiber optics
and premises cabling (copper, fiber & wireless),
so it covers techs working in both outside plant and
premises jobs.
Like other FOA
programs, the OJT-To-Cert program is free. If you
and/or your company is interested in the FOA
OJT-To-Cert program,
contact FOA.
To explain how OJT
works and FOA's OJT-To-Cert program, FOA created a
short video: Lecture 62: On
The Job Training For Fiber Optics Using Fiber
U
FOA
Direct Certification Program For Experienced Fiber Optic Techs
Experience Plus
Online Study At Fiber U = FOA Certification
Experienced fiber optic technicians can become FOA Certified using
their experience in fiber optics and study for the
FOA certification exams online at Fiber U. Thousands of
industry professionals have applied to the FOA
directly for certification without the need for
classroom training, based on their knowledge and
skills developed working the field. Since FOA
certifications are based on KSAs (knowledge, skills
and abilities), current techs can show the
skills and abilities required through their field
experience. FOA provides free online self-study courses at Fiber U for the knowledge
part to prepare you for FOA certification exams
which you can also take online.
If you are an experienced field tech interested in
certification, and FOA is the internationally
recognized certifying body for fiber optics, you can
find out more about the FOA Direct Certification Program
here.
If you are already a CFOT, FOA also offers many
specialist certifications you can obtain based on
your experience as a field tech. See what's
available at Fiber
U.

Fiber U "Basic Fiber
Optics" Online Self-Study Course Now In Spanish
El curso de
autoaprendizaje en línea "Fibra óptica básica" de
Fiber U ahora en español
El sitio de
aprendizaje en línea de FOA, Fiber U, tiene más de
dos docenas de cursos de autoaprendizaje gratuitos
sobre fibra óptica y cableado de instalaciones.
Como era de esperar, el tema más popular es el
curso "Fibra óptica básica", que se utiliza para
iniciarse en la fibra óptica y como curso de
preparación para realizar el examen de
certificación FOA CFOT.
Ahora el curso básico
de fibra óptica está disponible en español,
utilizando el libro de texto FOA en español, la
sección de la Guía en línea en español y la
capacidad de YouTube para traducir subtítulos de
video al español. El curso funciona exactamente
como la versión en inglés con 10 lecciones, cada
una con cuestionarios y una opción para tomar un
examen de Certificado de finalización.
Para presentar el nuevo curso de
español Fiber U, el examen Certificate of
Completion es gratuito, así que dígaselo a sus
contactos.
Curso Básico de Fibra Óptica
de Fibra U en español.
New Fiber U Course: Fiber Characterization
FOA has added a new course at Fiber U on Fiber Characterization. Fiber
characterization is the process for testing long fiber cable plants for
its ability for carrying high speed communications. With so many
networks now operating at 100, 200, 400 or even 800 Gb/s, fiber
characterization is important, especially on older fiber optic cable
plants.The free Fiber U Fiber Characterization course is available in two forms, as a standalone Fiber U fiber Characterization Course with its own Fiber U Certificate of Completion and as a separate Lesson in the Fiber U Fiber Optic Testing course. This course is recommended for those studying for the FOA CFOS/FC Fiber Characterization certification.
Fiber U MiniCourses: Got An Hour Or Less?
Learn Something New About Fiber Optics.
FOA
has introduced a new type of Fiber U
course, the MiniCourse, a free online course you
could take in a short time, perhaps as you ate lunch
at your desk or took a coffee break. The
topics of these courses should explain what they are
about, and these are all very important topics to
fiber optic techs.
New Fiber U MiniCourse - Fiber Optic Jargon
There is a new MiniCourse at Fiber U - Fiber Optic Jargon.
Jargon is the most important thing you need to learn when you learn
about a new technology. This short Fiber U MiniCourse is intended to
introduce you to fiber optic jargon and make learning about fiber much
easier. It's aimed at novices but is a good refresher for even
experienced techs.
Fiber Optics In Communications
How Optical Fiber Works
Fiber Optic Network
Restoration
Fiber
Optic Connector Identification
Fiber U Color Codes
The Mysterious
dB of Fiber Optics
Fiber Optic Cable Bend Radius
Fiber Optic Link Loss And Power
Budgets
Fiber Optic Connector
Inspection And Cleaning
Fiber Optic Media Conversion
Fiber Optic Cable Midspan Access
Reading An OTDR Trace
Reference Cables For Testing
Fiber Optic Attenuators
The courses have two components, video lectures and
readings, that are complementary. As usual there is
a self-test to allow you to check your
comprehension. As with other Fiber U courses if you
desire, you can take a short test for a Fiber U
Certificate of Completion that costs
only $10.
All these free courses and many more
are available at Fiber U.
What Fiber Techs
Don't Know -
What We Learn From
FOA Certification Tests
As
FOA moves more testing over to our digital online
testing system at ClassMarker, we have access to
more data about our testing, including what
questions and topics on the tests are answered
incorrectly most often. Having this data gives us an
opportunity to evaluate the questions and how they
are stated, but more importantly it allow us to help
our instructors teach the subjects and us to change
our curriculum and online courses to emphasize these
particular topics. These are some of the topics that
we have noticed are answered incorrectly more often
in FOA and Fiber U tests.
Most of the questions missed are on testing.
1. OTDRs - particularly what information is in the
OTDR trace.
2. The difference between dB and dBm
3. Loss budgets - both the concepts and doing the
math
4. Insertion loss testing - single-ended or double
ended for testing patchcords or cable plants, how to
set 0dB references
5. Units of measure - fiber is measured in microns,
wavelengths in nanometers, etc.
At FOA, we're working to add Fiber
U MiniCourses on these topics and working with
our schools to emphasize these topics in their
classes.
If you are going to be taking a FOA certification
course or test in the near future, these topics
should be on your final exam study list.
What We Learn From Hands On Labs
We learn about students performance in hands-on labs
from the feedback of our instructors and our own
experiences too. One big problem is the use of hand
tools. Growing up today, you learn how to use
keyboards, mouses and touch screens, but decades
ago, you also learned how to use basic hand tools.
This is big enough of a problem that we're
considering adding some video lessons on basic hand
tools to prepare students for cable prep,
termination and splicing that require the use of
hand tools.
FOA Guide "Basics Of
Fiber Optics" Now Available Online in Portuguese
(6/2020)

FOA
has now translated the Basics of Fiber Optics
textbook in our Online Guide into Portuguese,
joining Spanish and French translations. For those
speaking Portuguese, we have the technical
information and for schools we also have curriculum
available.
Here is the FOA
Guide in Portuguese,
Spanish
and French
translations.
Time
To Learn - Online
Some
schools have been closed during the pandemic, so FOA
has been working with them to create new online
learning experiences that can in some cases lead to
certification online. FOA certifications are still
based on the KSAs - knowledge from the classroom,
skills from the labs and abilities judged by
instructors or proven by actual experience.
ZOOMing
Much of what we're doing benefits from the
capabilities of "Zoom." Others have created
videoconferencing apps, but none work so well,
especially with limited bandwidth. We've seen remote
labs that have an instructor showing students how to
use the tools they were sent then watching them
duplicate their actions. We have worked out methods
to use Zoom to proctor FOA's online certification
exams.
Blended
Learning
While most FOA schools have suspended in-person
training during this period, some are offering a
"blended learning" option. That means that
students sign up for a FOA certification course,
take the classroom sessions on Fiber U with the
assistance of a FOA certified instructor. Now
online instruction can include reviewing the
labs using the Fiber U Basic
Skills Labs, then when it's possible to attend
classes at the school, complete the hands-on
labs and take the FOA certification exam.
Online Remote Labs
Alternatively, some schools are experimenting
with "remote labs," where the students get
sent tool kits and components and labs are
conducted by videoconferencing. Before the
labs, the students may watch demos by their
instructor on videoconferencing and/or review
the relevant "virtual hands-on" lessons in the
Fiber U Fiber Optics Basic Skills Labs
so they will already know the steps in the
exercises. And Fiber U has
the new Fiber U
DIY Basic Skills Lab lesson
with directions on how to
purchase inexpensive tools
online and use them to learn
basic fiber optic skills. Videoconferencing
allows the instructor to remotely monitor
their work and provide help as needed. Contact
the FOA for more information.

FOA Zoom Exam Proctoring
Online
Certification Testing
FOA has all its certification tests
available online, both for use by our
schools and by our direct "Work
to Cert" applicants. All FOA
certification tests require a proctor to
oversee the applicant taking the exam. In
this time of social distancing, getting a
proctor can be difficult, so FOA now has
procedures for online proctors
administering the exam. Contact
the FOA for more information.
OJT - On-The-Job-Training
Many novices get a job and learn on the job.
They usually have an experienced tech who helps
them gain the knowledge and learn the
skills they need to perform their job. Thinking
about this in relation to the FOA KSAs,
the knowledge, skills and abilities needed by a
fiber optic tech, the tech will learn
skills but not the basic knowledge that helps
them understand the processes involved. FOA can
offer help here with our FOA's
OJT-to-Cert Program,
using our Fiber
U online self-study programs. While the
tech learns on the job, they become a Fiber
U trainee, getting the knowledge they
need, while working under their "mentor" at
work. This is particularly good for
contracting companies who need techs but do
not have the usual training courses
available. Interested in OJT programs? Click
on the link below or contact FOA for
more information.
FOA's OJT-to-Cert
Program

FOA offers free online self-study programs at Fiber U.
Many users are preparing for FOA certification
programs - taking courses at our schools or using
the "Work-to-Cert" program. Some of our
schools are requiring Fiber U programs as
prerequisites for their classroom courses so they
can spend more time on hands-on activities.
FOA School Offers
Toolkit With Online Training
Slayton Solutions
(FOA Approved School #156) is offering a simple
fiber optic tool kit that includes a 29-piece set
of fiber optic tools and a power meter along with
training videos and online instruction for only
$499. 29 Piece Kit includes all tools and devices
a technician needs to install fiber optic
connectors and test optical power. You can contact them for
more information at slaytonsolutions@sbcglobal.net
or https://www.fiberopticsinstitute.com
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Publications /
Resources

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Cross Reference To FOA Tech Materials
FOA has so much technical reference material, we created a cross reference guide to the textbooks,
Online Guide and Fiber U courses, all the FOA technical information.
Besides the textbooks, online Guide and Fiber U, each section of the
Guide also includes links to the 100+ FOA videos available.
Cross Reference Guide to Textbooks, Online Guide and Fiber U
FOA Guide To Fiber Optic Workforce Development
To help those new to fiber optic workforce development, FOA has created a web page we call "Fiber Optic Workforce Development."
In this page, we share what we have learned about the fiber optic
workforce, who they are and how they learn their trade. We discuss what
defines a fiber optic tech and how they should be certified.
Read the FOA Guide To Fiber Optic Workforce Development online.
Latest FOA Book: Fiber Broadband (Paperback and Kindle)
In less than half a century,
fiber optics has revolutionized communications and to a large extent,
society in general. Broadband, what many today call high speed Internet
access, has become a necessity for everyone, not a luxury. The
technology that makes broadband possible is fiber optics, connecting the
continents, cities, and just about everybody. Even fiber to the home
(FTTH) brings broadband to hundreds of millions worldwide.
How did we get from an era when communications was making a telephone
call or sending a telegram to today’s world where every piece of
information – and misinformation – is available at the click of a mouse
or touch on a screen? How did we get from a time when a phone was
connected on copper wires to being able to connect practically anywhere
on a handheld device with more computing power than was available to
scientists and engineers only decades ago?
How does broadband work? Without fiber optics it would not work.
This book is not the typical FOA technical textbook - it is written for
anyone who wants to understand fiber broadband or fiber optics or the
Internet. It's also aimed at STEM teachers who want to include
communications technology in their classes. This book will try to
explain not only how fiber broadband works, but how
it was developed. It is intended to be an introduction to
communications technology
appropriate for a communications course at almost any level (junior
high, high school or
college,) for managers involved with broadband projects, or for anyone
who just wonders how all this stuff works.
The Fiber Optic Association Guide To Fiber Broadband
Paperback ($12.95) and Kindle ($9.95) versions available from Amazon or most booksellers. Kindle version is in color!
More Translations of FOA Textbooks
FOA is a very international organization and it works hard to
accommodate the language needs of everyone. We have been translating our
books and website into the languages most requested, and this month, we
add two more textbook translations. We also want to thank Jerry Morla,
FOA CFOS/I instructor and Director who has been doing the recent
translations into Spanish, his native language.
Here is a listing of all the FOA textbook Translations
Spanish Editions:
Guía de Referencia de la Asociación de Fibra Óptica (FOA) Sobre Fibra
Óptica: Guía de estudio para la certificación de la FOA Amazon
La Referencia de Cableado para Predios de la FOA: Guía para Certificación de la FOA Amazon
La Asociación de Fibra Óptica Manual de Fibra Hasta el Hogar : Para
Planificadores, Gestores, Diseñadores, Instaladores y Operadores De
FTTH Amazon
Guía de Referencia de la FOA sobre Diseño de la red de fibra óptica: Guía de Estudio para la Certificación de la FOA Amazon
And the FOA Reference Guide To Fiber Optics:
French Edition: Le
Guide de référence de la FOA pour la fibre optique et et
guide d'étude pour la certification FOA: Guide d'étude pour
la certification FOA Amazon
Portuguese Edition: Guia de Referência sobre Fibra Óptica da FOA : Guia de Estudo para a Certificação da FOA Amazon
The subject matter of these books is also translated in the FOA Guide online.
Planning A Fiber Optic Project?
The FOA Guide To Fiber Optic Projects includes this timeline and comments on project planning and implementation.
More New FOA Video
Lectures On YouTube
Did you know YouTube
will close caption videos in many languages?
Here are directions.
FOA Lecture 73, The History of Fiber Optics - A Timeline fiber optics from the beginning.
FOA YouTube Video Describes
On-The-Job Training (OJT)
FOA Lecture 67 Fiber Optics At
Electrical Utilities
More New Videos
Including FTTH Series
Like all our YouTube lectures, they are
all short and easy to understand.
Did
you know YouTube will close caption videos in many
languages?

Sign in with Google to get translations for closed
captioning. Click on the settings icon (red arrow.)
Choose "Subtitles". English is the default
language. Click on the arrow after "English
(auto-generated) >". In the new window click on
"Auto-translate" and choose the language you
want.
FOA Loss Budget
Calculator On A Web Page 5/2020
FOA
has written many articles about loss budgets,
something everyone involved in fiber optics needs to
know and needs to know how to calculate. We recently
discovered how to get a spreadsheet ported to a Web
page, so we created this web page that calculates
loss budgets. We have an iOS loss budget app, but
with this web page, you can calculate loss budgets
from any device, smart phone, tablet, laptop, or
desktop computer that has web browsing capability.
Bookmark this page (especially on your
smartphone): FOA Loss Budget Calculator
Online
We are continually updating the Online Reference
Guide to keep up with changes in the industry and
adding lots of new pages of technical information.
When you go to the FOA
Guide Table of Contents to see the latest
updates - look for .
Recent updates:
FTTH
Updates: Added a section on FTTH Network Design,
updated Architecture and PONs (10G)
Color Codes For Fiber Optics
Includes print your own pocket guide and versions for your smartphone.
Fiber
Optic Projects - the FOA Guide to projects from
concept to operation
Coherent Communications Systems in
the FOA Guide.
Go
to The FOA Online Fiber Optic
Reference Guide.
FOA Reference Books

FOA's FTTH Handbook: We've
gathered all our information on FTTH from the FOA
Guide and past issues of the FOA Newsletter and
edited it into a 112 page "FTTH Handbook." We even
added a section on planning and managing FTTH
Projects.
The Fiber Optic Association
Fiber To The Home Handbook is
available from Amazon in print and Kindle
editions.

Sitio web y manual de FTTH ahora en español
Sitio web y manual de FTTH ahora en español - FTTH Website And Handbook Now In Spanish
El Manual FOA FTTH se ha convertido en el libro FOA
más vendido y tiene una calificación de 4.7/5 por parte de los
compradores en Amazon.
FOA ha notado mucho interés en FTTH en otras áreas del mundo,
especialmente en América Central y del Sur, por lo que tradujimos el
sitio web de FTTH y el Manual de FTTH al español.
Available in paperback from Amazon or ebook on Amazon Kindle.
Disponible como libro de tapa blanda en Amazon o como libro electrónico en Amazon Kindle.
El sitio web de FOA FTTH ahora en español.
El Manual FOA FTTH se ha convertido en el libro FOA
más vendido y tiene una calificación de 4.7/5 por parte de los
compradores en Amazon.
FOA ha notado mucho interés en FTTH en otras áreas del mundo,
especialmente en América Central y del Sur, por lo que tradujimos el
sitio web de FTTH y el Manual de FTTH al español.
Disponible como libro de tapa blanda en Amazon o como libro electrónico en Amazon Kindle.
El sitio web de FOA FTTH ahora en español.

Fiber Optics (4 languages), Premises Cabling, OSP
fiber and construction, Network Design, Testing and
FTTH
The FOA has it's own
reference books for everyone working in fiber
optics - contractors, installers and end users as
well as for use as textbooks in classes at
educational institutions. They are available as
printed books or Kindle at much lower prices than
most textbooks since we self-publish and sell
online, cutting out the middlemen. Click on the
book images for more information. The Reference
Guide To Fiber Optics is also available in
Spanish, French and Portuguese. The Design book is available in English
and Spanish.
Click on any book for more information
about it.
FOA
has reprinted

"Lennie Lightwave's Guide"
on its 25th anniversary in a special print
edition.
Lennie
and Uncle Ted's
Guides are online or as free iBooks on iTunes.

Click on any of
the books to learn more.
- Fiber
Optic Safety Poster to download and
print
Resources For
Teachers In K-12 And Technical Schools
Teachers in all grades can introduce their
students to fiber optic technology with some
simple demonstrations. FOA has created a page for
STEM or STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts
and math) teachers with materials appropriate to
their classes. Fiber Optic Resources For
Teachers.
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Safety
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On Safety
The FOA is concerned about safety!
FOA
considers safety an integral part of all our
programs, curriculum materials and technical
materials. We start all our textbooks and their
online versions with a section on safety in the
first chapter, like this: Before
we get started - Safety First!
There are pages on the FOA Guide on Safety
procedures Including Eye Safety and. Digging
Safely
And a YouTube lecture: FOA Lecture 2: Safety When Working
With Fiber Optics
In our OSP Construction Section, these pages cover
many safety issues including those related to the
construction of the cable plant: Project Preparation And Guidelines,
Underground Cable Construction,
Underground Cable Installation
and Aerial Cable Installation.
There is even a safety poster for the fiber
activities: PDF Safety Rules For Fiber Optics
Other Safety Resources:
There is a toll-free
"call before you dig" number in the USA: Dial 811. See www.call811.com
for more information in the US. Here is their map of resources by states.
In Canada, it's "Click Before You Dig.com" They also have a page of resources by US states and Canadian provinces.
The Common Ground
Alliance has an excellent "Best Practices Guide"
online
- The US Department
of Transportation has a website called "National
Pipeline Mapping System" that allows one
to search for buried pipelines.
Why We Warn You To
Be Careful About Fiber Shards

Photo courtesy Brian Brandstetter,
Mississauga Training Consultantcy
2023 Conference On
Damage Prevention In Tampa

Global Excavation Safety Conference Tampa, Florida
February 14-16, 2023
GlobalExcavationSafetyConference.com:

The magazine, dp-Pro, sponsor of the conference,
has also published it's latest issue with an
article by FOA on "New Construction Techniques
in Fiber Optics" and a overview of the FOA. You can read the magazine here.
When You Bury Marker
Tape, Bury One That Will Work (July 2021)

Signaltape® provides a visual
warning by ensuring tape is brought to the surface,
alerting the operator to the presence of a buried
utility. It includes a 3,000-lb. tensile strength
aramid fiber membrane, which ensures the tape is
pulled to the surface to alert the excavation crew.
Signaltape
comes in two sizes: 12″ x 1000′ or 6″ x
1000′.
FOA
Corporate Members - Products & Services
List
of corporate member information provided by FOA
corporate members listed on the FOA website.
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FOA/About
About The FOA
- Contact
Us: http://www.foa.org
or email <info@foa.org>

FOA has a company page
and four LinkedIn Groups
FOA
- official company page on LinkedIn
FOA
- covers FOA, technology and jobs in the fiber optic
marketplace
FOA
Fiber Optic Training - open to all, covers
fiber optic technology and training topics
Grupo de La Asociación de
Fibra Óptica FOA (Español)
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What is The FOA?
The FOA is a, international non-profit
educational association chartered to promote
professionalism in fiber optics through education,
certification and standards.
Founded in 1995 by a dozen prominent fiber optics
trainers and leaders from education, industry and government as a professional society for fiber
optics and a source of independent certification,
the FOA has grown to now being involved in numerous
activities to educate the world about fiber optics
and certify the workers who design, build and
operate the world's fiber optic networks.
Read More
FOA History
FOA Timeline of Fiber Optics
Contact
Us
The Fiber Optic Association Inc.
https://www.foa.org or email
<info@foa.org>
https://www.thefoa.org or email <info@thefoa.org>
Telephone/text: 760-451-3655
The
FOA Home Page

Want to know more about fiber optics? Study
for FOA certifications? Free
Self-Study Programs are on "Fiber U®."
Looking for specific information? Here's the largest
technical reference on the web: The
FOA Online Fiber Optic Reference Guide.

Free online self-study programs
on many fiber optics and cabling topics are
available at Fiber U,
FOA's online web-based training website.
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-
Contact Us
The Fiber Optic Association Inc.
The FOA Home Page
Fiber Optic Timeline
(C)1999-2023, The Fiber Optic Association, Inc.
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FOA Logo
Merchandise
New FOA Swag! Shirts,
Caps, Stickers, Cups, etc.
The
FOA has created a store on Zazzle.com offering lots
of new logo merchandise. It has lots of versions of
shirts and other merchandise with "FOA," "Fiber U,"
"Lennie Lightwave" designs and more so you should
find something just for you! See FOA on Zazzle.
-

Your
Name, CFOT® - It pays to advertise!
The FOA encourages
CFOTs to use the logo on their business cards,
letterhead, truck or van, etc. and provides logo
files for that purpose. But we are also asked
about how to use the CFOT or CFOS certifications.
Easy, you can refer to yourself as "Your Name,
CFOT" or "Your Name, CFOS/T" for example.
Feel free to use the
logo and designations to promote your achievements
and professionalism!
Contact
FOA at info@thefoa.org to get logos in file format
for your use.
Privacy Policy (for
the EU GDPR): The FOA does not
use cookies or any other web tricks to gather
information on visitors to our website, nor do
we allow commercial advertising. Our website
hosts may gather traffic statistics for the
visitors to our website and our online testing
service, ClassMarker, maintains statistics of
test results. We do not release or misuse any
information on any of our members except we will
confirm FOA certifications and Fiber U
certificates of completion when requested by
appropriate persons such as employers or
personnel services.
Read
the complete FOA Privacy Policy here.
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