Fiber cable overview – H3C Technologies H3C SR6600-X User Manual

Page 44

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34

Figure 37 SFP+ transceiver module

Fiber cable overview

CAUTION:

Never exert a fierce force when you insert or remove a fiber connector.

Never pull, press or extrude the fiber fiercely.

Optical fibers can be classified into single-mode optical fibers and multi-mode optical fibers. A

single-mode optical fiber carries only a single ray of light, and a multi-mode optical fiber carries multiple

modes of lights.

Table 8 Characteristics of single-mode and multi-mode optical fibers

Item Single-mode optical fiber

Multi-mode optical fiber

Core

Small core (10 micrometers or less)

Larger core than single-mode
optical fiber (50 micrometers, 62.5

micrometers or greater)

Dispersion Less

dispersion

Allows greater dispersion and
therefore, signal loss exists

Light source and transmission
distance

Users lasers as the light source often

within campus backbones for distance
of several thousand meters

Uses LEDs as the light source often
within LANs or distances of a

couple hundred meters within a

campus network

Table 9

lists the allowed maximum tensile load and crush load for the fiber.

Table 9 Allowed maximum tensile force and crush load

Period of force

Tensile load (N)

Crush load (N/mm)

Short period

150

500

Long term

80

100

Fiber connectors are indispensable passive components in an optical fiber communication system. They

allow the removable connection between optical channels, which makes the optical system debugging

and maintenance more convenient. There are multiple types of fiber connectors.

Figure 38

shows an LC

connector. Fiber ports of the H3C SR6604-X, SR6608-X, and SR6616-X routers support only LC
connectors.

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