There are two types of fibre -
multimode and single mode.
Multimode fibre can carry
multiple light rays (modes) at the same time by having
varying optical properties at the core; essentially
light travelling the shortest path (down the middle)
travels the slowest.
The larger core simplifies
connections and takes advantage of the lower cost LED &
VCSEL technologies which operate in the 850nm window.
Due to dispersion the range is
limited so it tends to be used as premises cabling when
less than a kilometre. It comes in two core sizes, 62.5
and 50 microns.
Singlemode fibre has a
much smaller core size of 9 microns and has a single
light path and can travel much longer distances of up to
100km.
The require more expensive
electronics which operate in the 1310 and 1550nm windows
and are typically used in longer distance LAN's, Cable
TV and telephony applications.
Fibre Optic Cable
Transmission Distances
These are the typical distances
achieved with each fibre type, however some cable
manufacturers offer enhanced cables which exceed these,
sometimes referred to as OM1 Plus, OM2 Plus etc. The
table below shows distances for ratified standards only.
There are some exceptions to
these distances.
-
You can extend the distance
on all multi mode fibre optic cables for Gigabit to
2km with propriety cabling installed and additional
performance is required.
-
By using singlemode modules
and a mode conditioning cable, you can increase the
range on OM1 fibre optic cable to 550m.
|
62.5/125 OM1
200MHz
(850nm) |
50/125 OM2
500MHz
(850nm) |
50/125 OM3
1500MHz*
(850nm) |
50/125 OM4
3500MHz*
(850nm) |
9/125 OS1
(1310nm) |
100Mb |
2km |
2km |
2km |
2km |
40km |
1Gb |
275m |
550m |
800m |
1100m |
100km |
10Gb |
33m |
82m |
300m |
550m |
40km |
40Gb/100Gb |
- |
- |
100m |
125m |
40km |
*
overfill launch bandwidth
|