> With active, each strand has to run back to a switch somewhere.
Right, I got that. I'm talking mechanically on the pole, in front of
the house. How do you suck their one fiber out of the 144 count up on
the pole?
On 06/16/2016 09:22 AM, Josh Reynolds wrote:
On gpon via a splitter. 1 fiber in, multiple fibers out. Can be on the
pole, in a pedestal, or even in the ground in a hand hole.
With active, each strand has to run back to a switch somewhere.
On Jun 16, 2016 11:20 AM, "Bruce Robertson" <br...@pooh.com
<mailto:br...@pooh.com>> wrote:
Noob question - mechanically, how do you break out an individual
fiber outside the dwelling?
On 06/16/2016 09:15 AM, Chuck McCown wrote:
Something that small, run 144 count fiber, home run to each
dwelling and then choose active or PON back at your cabinet.
-----Original Message----- From: Rob Genovesi
Sent: Thursday, June 16, 2016 10:14 AM
To: af@afmug.com <mailto:af@afmug.com>
Subject: [AFMUG] Building small GPON network
We're looking at our first fiber neighborhood project, about
90 homes.
The neighborhood will be fed via wireless and fiber used for
distribution. It's 100% aerial in remote private neighborhood.
Currently in the research/feasibility stage, but I hope this
will be
our first build and a good project to cut our teeth on.
A few questions, answer off-list if you prefer:
- What OLT/ONT have people been using and liked for a small
GPON network?
- Reading about "Distributed Tap Architecture" vs Splitting
method.
Anyone have experience with Tap?
- Armored or Dielectric? 100% aerial at the bottom of a
canyon under
dense tree canopy.
I'm sure there will be more questions, thanks in advance for
any sharing.
Rob Genovesi • Coastside.Net • Owner
650-712-5900 <tel:650-712-5900> • 525B Obispo Rd • Half Moon
Bay CA
!DSPAM:2,5762d245184159820018358!