nanog mailing list archives
Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path?
From: Michael Loftis <mloftis () wgops com>
Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2016 15:27:17 -0800
IDK what elsewhere uses but strand or (less common) span is the common term I've seen specifically for a passive piece of glass between two points. On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 12:55 PM, Fletcher Kittredge <fkittred () gwi net> wrote:
What is the standard terminology for strands of dark fiber spliced together to form a continuous path between points A and Z? I have seen: - *fiber circuit* [but also seen used to denote a connection at the network layer over a physical fiber connection. This definition of circuit would include the dark fiber path, the transmitters and receivers and logic making up the data and network layers.] - *fiber loop *[ Does a loop define an electrical circuit with two physically separate positive and negative strands? In that case, is this a Bellhead remnant? ] I am particularly interested in last mile systems, but I don't see any reason that the term wouldn't be the same in the middle mile. thanks, Fletcher -- Fletcher Kittredge GWI 8 Pomerleau Street Biddeford, ME 04005-9457 207-602-1134
-- "Genius might be described as a supreme capacity for getting its possessors into trouble of all kinds." -- Samuel Butler
Current thread:
- Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Fletcher Kittredge (Feb 24)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Larry Sheldon (Feb 24)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Anthony Junk (Feb 25)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Michael Loftis (Feb 25)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Dave Cohen (Feb 25)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Velocity Lists (Feb 26)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Jon Swanson (Feb 26)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Dave Cohen (Feb 25)
- Re: Standard terminology for a dark fiber path? Larry Sheldon (Feb 24)