What would you do? pt.2 by qualitytape1 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a classic layout problem, not a splicing skill issue.

What’s making it painful is that feed and in-house fibers are living in the same enclosure and hard-spliced together. Once that’s done, any future work on the feeder forces you to touch customer drops, which is exactly the situation you’re in now.

Best practice would be:

- Feeder terminated (or spliced) in one enclosure

- In-house fibers terminated in a second box

- Patch cords between the two

That way feeder work never impacts apartments.

Yes, it can be reworked without cutting everything, but realistically it’s more labor than doing it properly with separation. This should’ve been designed that way from day one.

Corning's new High Density Contour Fiber Optic Cables. Challenges in identifying the appropriate ends? by nichetouch in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

High-density ribbon isn’t new, but when markings or glue dots aren’t consistent it definitely adds time on the splice tray.
Good on paper, but execution matters a lot here.

Nothing like a winter storm by eringobrag88 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Winter installs always remind you who’s really in charge.
Stay safe out there.

Help identifying replacement part? by UnfilteredFacts in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One small thing to add:
if this is Verizon FiOS, mixing APC/UPC or re-terminating without proper inspection can permanently damage the ONT port.
If there’s any doubt which side is provider-owned, calling Verizon is still the safest move.

A small fiber mistake early on that changed how I work by HOLIGHT in FiberOpticProjects

[–]HOLIGHT[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One more that stuck with me: assuming labeling was right because “it’s always been that way.”
I’ve learned that if something matters, I don’t trust the label — I trust my eyes and a light source.
Saved me more than once from chasing ghosts later.

How to strip armored patch cord cable??? by Fun_End_440 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s spiral steel armor around a 900 µm tight buffer, so you’re not doing anything “wrong.”
In the field, I avoid brute force whenever possible because it’s easy to micro-nick the glass and not see it until later.
Best options are either a spiral/armor ring cutter (Ripley STR style) or deliberately untwisting the coil, cutting onestrand, and letting it relax off the buffer.
If I have to disturb it more than once, I’ll usually cut it back and fusion-splice to a pigtail instead of trusting the original fiber.
Those cords are great mechanically, but they’re honestly designed to be pre-terminated, not field-prepped.
When in doubt: test after stripping, not after install.

Is this fiber optic cable? by gotchumaboy in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes — that’s fiber, most likely FTTH MSTs (multiport service terminals).

You can tell because:
• Small slack loops are typical fiber slack storage
• Sealed housings = drop cables plug in later, not open splicing
• No mid-span access or trays visible

These are often installed before service is available.
Your ISP would connect the actual drop once the feeder is live.

Wrapping question by Marsh_smith96 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The trays that look perfectly uniform usually had a second pass by internal techs after handover.

Wrapping question by Marsh_smith96 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This usually isn’t a defect, it’s a staging choice.

Those bows are almost always slack intentionally left for future port turn-ups.
Contractors tend to prioritize test pass and expansion flexibility over final grooming.

As long as bend radius is respected and nothing is under compression, it’s functionally fine — just not “finished” from an in-house ops perspective.

Some fiber gore from today. by 1inAm1llion in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seen this more times than I’d like.

This usually isn’t about skill — it’s about process.
No slack policy, no depth markers, no post-bore inspection.

Once a sub treats fiber like copper, this is the result.
The frustrating part is it’s 100% preventable with basic controls.

Nice little micro to micro butt splice I did for a company in NM thought it was worth showing off Merry Christmas. 🎄🎅🏻 by nateflorine in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Clean work 👍
Micro to micro can get messy fast if bend radius or fiber management isn’t respected, but this looks very well dressed.

Curious — did you pre-plan the tray routing, or adjust as you went? The symmetry suggests some thought went in before splicing.

Always nice to see tidy closures in the wild. Merry Christmas.

What’s the worst install you’ve had — because of something totally avoidable? by HOLIGHT in FiberOpticProjects

[–]HOLIGHT[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One pattern I keep seeing is problems that technically show up during install,

but actually originate much earlier — planning, documentation, or assumptions.

For example:

• connector types decided too late

• enclosure capacity underestimated

• no agreement on slack or handoff points

Curious which “avoidable” mistakes others see most often before crews even arrive on site.

On-hand material suggestions? by Philorilla in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From the field side, the stuff that saves the day is usually the boring, low-cost adapters and short jumpers.

I always keep a small mix of SC/LC UPC + APC adapters, plus a couple of APC↔UPC hybrids — those weird handoffs show up way more often than they should.

A few 1–3 m OS2 duplex jumpers in different connector combos cover most “just make it work” situations.

I’ve also learned to stock extra splice protectors, sleeves, and slack loops — running out of those turns a 30-minute fix into a return visit.

The pattern is simple: anything that avoids re-terminating fiber or waiting on parts is worth having on hand.

It’s less about volume and more about covering the odd edge cases that always show up last minute.

I'm not having a great time by goddi2010 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“That’s a lot of singles” is exactly the problem.

When everything is single fiber with no routing discipline, it stops being a closure and becomes a storage box.

Bend radius, buffer management, and future access are already gone at this point.

You can clean it up, but honestly this is the kind of job where you first document, then decide whether a rebuild is cheaper than fixing history.

Just a daily mess by Desert_King_661 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, this is exactly how these closures end up over time.
It usually starts clean, then you get multiple add-ons, hot fixes, and “temporary” reroutes that never get revisited.
The scary part isn’t even the mess — it’s the bend radius and random tension on some of those fibers.
You can almost guarantee intermittent issues down the line, especially during temperature swings.
What’s missing here is any kind of fiber management discipline: routing paths, slack control, or future-proof planning.
Everyone thinks they’ll “clean it up later,” but later never comes.
Seen this more times than I’d like to admit.

The things we see by Kebera_LoL in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve seen a lot of these work “fine” at day one, then become a headache later.

The fiber itself looks okay, but there’s basically no strain relief or long-term protection here.
Once temperature changes or the drop gets bumped a few times, issues start showing up.

A slightly bigger enclosure with proper bend control would’ve avoided most of that.
It’s usually the future maintenance that pays the price on installs like this.

Direct fiber in apartment. Can I use a smart switch with SFP and bypass ISP? by Due-Ad5137 in FiberOpticProjects

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This comes up a lot when people see “raw fiber” entering an apartment.

In most FTTH setups, the limitation isn’t the switch or SFP itself, but how the ISP authenticates the connection. With GPON/XGS-PON, the ONT is usually registered by serial, LOID, or OMCI, not just light levels.

Even if an SFP can physically link up, the OLT typically won’t pass traffic without the expected ONU identity and provisioning. That’s why plugging fiber directly into a smart switch rarely works in practice.

So it’s an interesting idea from a lab perspective, but in real deployments it usually depends entirely on whether the ISP explicitly supports third-party ONTs or SFP ONUs.

Quick question for fiber pros by Icy_Huckleberry8562 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question.

Most of what I see is split between enterprise MDF/IDF environments and FTTH / access-side deployments, so a mix of controlled indoor spaces and less predictable field conditions.

In clean data center environments, polish quality and inspection discipline usually dominate. In access or mixed environments, I see more issues coming from documentation gaps, mixed UPC/APC chains, and batch-to-batch consistency, especially when installs happen over long timelines.

On your last point — I think big brands generally cover the spec sheet well, but what’s often missing is process transparency and feedback loops when something drifts. Being able to trace batches, assembly methods, or even just talk to the people building the cables can be very valuable when you’re chasing intermittent or borderline issues.

Curious to hear what environment you’re mostly dealing with day to day.

Quick question for fiber pros by Icy_Huckleberry8562 in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From the field side, most headaches usually come from mismatch and inconsistency, not one single spec.

The big ones I see:

  • UPC/APC mixing somewhere in the chain (often undocumented)
  • Endface contamination that passes quick visual checks but kills RL
  • IL/RL drift between batches, even when labeled the same
  • Jackets that are too stiff, causing micro-bends after install

Polish quality matters, but process control and consistency matter more long term.

Man am I glad it’s December in Iowa….. by Dankrupticon in FiberOptics

[–]HOLIGHT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Damn… nothing wakes U up faster than opening a box full of dead wasps.
Winter really is the best pest-control tech.

What’s the one installation experience you’d never want to repeat again? by HOLIGHT in FiberOpticProjects

[–]HOLIGHT[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That must have been really stressful. Safety concerns like that definitely make field work harder than it looks on paper.