Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense
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@dotdash said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
Maybe you could terminate the fiber on a switch with several sfp slots.
I'm with you on this.
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@PHILOX24 said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
@JKnott Thank you for your answer.
Here, a picture of the cable, and the sheath : https://www.noelshack.com/2019-41-2-1570545356-capture.png
So i guess it's a single mode.It's hard to tell from that picture what it is. That looks like white or cream to me. Also, it appears a bit thick for fibre. That might be an out sheath, with individual fibres inside.
What about the wavelength. it's mean i need 2 SPF with the same wavelength for one system, and 2 SPF with the wavelength, but different at the 2 first SPF ?
With a single fibre, you have to get 2 different wavelengths for each system. So, for 2 systems, you'd need 4 different wavelengths. The SFP should list the wavelength. If you look up the part number, it should provide the details.
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@JKnott said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
@NogBadTheBad said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
I wonder if there is any way to query the SFPs from pfSense to find the type then work out what the fibre is from that.
Just look at the sheath. The colour indicates the type. Also, there's the matter of wavelength. You need to use different wavelengths for each system. With a single fibre "simplex" connection you will need 2 wavelengths for each system. The splitters will have ports for each supported wavelength.
Its between two buildings it wont look like a patch lead
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@NogBadTheBad said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
@dotdash said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
Maybe you could terminate the fiber on a switch with several sfp slots.
I'm with you on this.
You'd still need a splitter. The detectors used in the SFP are not wavelength selective, so you need a filter ahead of it, to separate the different systems. Filters have multiple connectors on them, for each wavelength supported.
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@JKnott Ok i'll check better tomorrow, to be sure.
One person in the company told me they ask for single mode. So i guess it's single mode. But i'll check.When you said i need 2 different wavelengths by systems, it's mean i need 2 fibre by systems ?
Or it's mean i just need 2 SPF with different wavelenths by systems ?
I'm a bit confuse :/Sorry to be stupid, can you explained it quiclky with a quick scheme ?
Thanks so much. -
@NogBadTheBad said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
Its between two buildings it wont look like a patch lead
What point is he looking at the cable? In my experience, the telecom brings the fibre right to the filters, though in some cases there may be a separate patch panel elsewhere in the building with a patch cable to the filter. However, the cable in the picture he later provided, it appears he has a cable with multiple strands. The different colours designate the strands. He needs to determine the specs of that cable somehow. There's no way we can tell him that. Perhaps he can talk to whoever installed the cable or provides the service.
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@PHILOX24 said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
@JKnott Ok i'll check better tomorrow, to be sure.
One person in the company told me they ask for single mode. So i guess it's single mode. But i'll check.When you said i need 2 different wavelengths by systems, it's mean i need 2 fibre by systems ?
Or it's mean i just need 2 SPF with different wavelenths by systems ?
I'm a bit confuse :/Sorry to be stupid, can you explained it quiclky with a quick scheme ?
Thanks so much.With a single fibre, you need one wavelength for one direction and a different wavelength for the other. That's 2 for a single system. Multiply that by the number of systems for the total number of wavelengths. With 2 fibres, you'd generally use the same wavelength in each direction.
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If resiliency is your main issue and cost not an issue I'd use 2 switches per site in a stack and create a LAG across the two switches.
Are the 4 strands in the same sheath, if so 2 switches would be an overkill at each site.
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@JKnott said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
@NogBadTheBad said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
Its between two buildings it wont look like a patch lead
What point is he looking at the cable? In my experience, the telecom brings the fibre right to the filters, though in some cases there may be a separate patch panel elsewhere in the building with a patch cable to the filter. However, the cable in the picture he later provided, it appears he has a cable with multiple strands. The different colours designate the strands. He needs to determine the specs of that cable somehow. There's no way we can tell him that. Perhaps he can talk to whoever installed the cable or provides the service.
Thats why I suggested looking at the cable and sfp.
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@PHILOX24 said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
@JKnott Thank you for your answer.
Here, a picture of the cable, and the sheath : https://www.noelshack.com/2019-41-2-1570545356-capture.png
So i guess it's a single mode.What about the wavelength. it's mean i need 2 SPF with the same wavelength for one system, and 2 SPF with the wavelength, but different at the 2 first SPF ?
Sorry, i'm new in optical.Thank you for your help.
BTW you can drag your screenshots into the message window, no need to host them somewhere :)
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@PHILOX24 said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
Gl - CA438 - 00020 - 02 - 4 FO
https://img-en.fs.com/file/datasheet/lgx-box-plc-splitters-datasheet.pdf
Wide Operating Wavelength: From 1260nm to 1650nm
You might be better talking with fs.com direct.
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@NogBadTheBad said in Optical Fiber, Splitter & Pfsense:
Wide Operating Wavelength: From 1260nm to 1650nm
That range includes several wavelengths, including the entire CWDM range.
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