Single-Mode Fiber Installation
Single-mode fiber is commonly used for longer-distance connections, network backbones, building-to-building links, and infrastructure that may need additional capacity in the future. Mark can review what the connection needs to accomplish and help determine whether single-mode fiber fits the project.
Multimode Fiber Installation
Multimode fiber is commonly used for shorter high-speed connections within buildings, equipment rooms, network closets, and commercial facilities. The right choice depends on the actual network, equipment, distance, and bandwidth requirements.
Fiber Backbone Installation
A fiber backbone can carry network traffic between major parts of a building or facility, including equipment rooms, network closets, floors, warehouse sections, and network distribution points.
Building-to-Building Fiber
Fiber can connect offices, warehouses, industrial buildings, and other structures on the same property. Mark can review the distance, available pathways, equipment locations, and what the connected buildings need to share across the network.
Underground Fiber Installation
Some properties require fiber to travel through underground pathways between buildings or different parts of a site. The route, conduit, distance, entry points, and existing infrastructure all affect the scope of the work.
Aerial Fiber Installation
Some properties may require an above-ground fiber route where an aerial pathway is the practical option. The site, connection points, distance, and infrastructure at both ends need to be considered before installation.
Fiber Optic Cable Pulling
Commercial fiber may need to be routed through conduit, cable trays, telecommunications spaces, network rooms, warehouses, equipment areas, or pathways between buildings. The route matters as much as the cable itself.
Fusion Splicing
Fusion splicing permanently joins fiber strands and may be used when connecting sections of fiber, repairing damaged cable, extending an existing route, or completing larger installations.
Mechanical Splicing
Mechanical splicing joins fiber strands without permanently fusing them. Depending on the project, it may be considered for certain repairs, installations, or connection requirements.
Fiber Termination
Fiber termination prepares installed cable to connect with patch panels, equipment, and the rest of the network. The termination method needs to match the fiber and equipment being used.
Fiber Patch Panels
Fiber patch panels provide an organized place to terminate, protect, and manage connections in network closets, telecommunications rooms, server rooms, equipment racks, and industrial network areas.
Fiber Testing & Certification
Testing can help identify connection problems, signal loss, damaged fiber, poor splices, termination problems, and other issues along the cable route. The testing method depends on the project and what needs to be verified.
OTDR Testing
OTDR testing can help evaluate a fiber link and locate breaks, excessive signal loss, problematic splices, connection issues, or the approximate location of a fault.
Fiber Troubleshooting & Repair
Mark can evaluate an existing connection and help determine whether the issue is related to the fiber, termination, splice, equipment connection, or another part of the network.
Existing Fiber Upgrades
An existing fiber network may need changes to support additional equipment, more network traffic, expanded operations, upgraded hardware, or another area of the property.
Fiber Network Expansion
A fiber expansion may add another network closet, connect a new part of a building, extend service to another building, add new connections, or expand an existing backbone.
Fiber Demarc Extensions
A demarc extension can carry a connection from the existing point of entry to an equipment room, network closet, server room, or another part of the facility where the network needs to receive it.
New Construction Fiber Installation
New construction gives businesses an opportunity to plan network rooms, fiber routes, conduit, building connections, and future expansion before the property is fully completed.
Warehouse & Industrial Fiber
Fiber can connect warehouse sections, network rooms, offices, production areas, equipment locations, separate buildings, and major network distribution points across large properties.