nanog mailing list archives

Re: importance of fiber cleaning


From: Mel Beckman <mel () beckman org>
Date: Wed, 21 Sep 2016 09:53:49 +0000

This is a very comprehensive article, and worth handing out to techs. I have one comment on Balder’s OTDR suggestion, 
and one on the article’s microscope instructions.

Although it certainly can’t hurt to run an OTDR test (except for extended downtime), I fear hauling out the extra gear 
will prompt many techs to put off fiber cleaning. In my experience, just doing the cleaning solves 99.9% of the 
problem. Anything that an OTDR would pick up would likely severely impact performance, while dirty connector will just 
increase the error rate.

Also, the article didn’t mention eye safety when using a fiber microscope. The example showed a USB digital video 
microscope, but many maintainer kits in the field have much cheaper direct-view optical microscopes. Viewing an 
energized fiber with a direct-view microscope can cause major eye damage. I recommend all fiber kits throw out their 
optical scopes and substitute a USB or WiFI scope (some of these can be used with a cell phone or tablet). 

 -mel


On Sep 21, 2016, at 1:58 AM, Baldur Norddahl <baldur.norddahl () gmail com> wrote:

It is a good article. It is missing a few points:

If you are going to do the full efford of cleaning and then microscope each connector, you would also want to finish 
off by doing a OTDR scan of the link. This is your documentation for a clean link.

Always use optics that can monitor the signal level. The reality is that best practice, as described in the article, 
will not always be followed. In most case you will be good anyway as long your optics report back a signal strength 
with a good margin. Have your automated monitoring system watch over those signal levels.

Slightly dirty connectors will often give a sufficient link quality anyway if you have plenty of power budget to 
spare. We use many 1G single mode BIDI optics which cost about 10 USD each for 20 km modules and most of the links 
are only 1-5 km. The customer end of those links are probably all half dirty, but nobody cares as long we get a 
strong signal back with power budget to spare.

Regards,

Baldur

On 09/21/2016 07:56 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:

https://www.sunet.se/blogg/long-read-cleanliness-is-a-virtue/

This is an excellent article regarding fiber cleaning and its importance. Please do share with other people in our 
business. I'm sure lack of proper fiber cleaning causes a lot of unneccessary outages and operational problems 
worldwide, partly because people aren't aware of its importance.




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