There are a variety of methods that I've heard about. Most involve sealing it 
up, whether it's duct seal, other conduit skins, etc.




--
Mike Hammett

----- Original Message -----
From: "Adam Moffett" <[email protected]>
To: "AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 4:22:07 PM
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] how is underground FTTH done?



Interesting. So they're taking a bundle of microducts, cutting away some jacket 
in the middle and coupling a single conduit to one in the bundle? Like one of 
these things? 


What do they do with the part they opened up before they rebury it? Wrap it up 
in tape? Rebury it as-is? 


MicroDuct is bundled into an easy-to-handle unit known as FuturePath. 
FuturePath can be installed just like standard duct: open trench, aerial, 
directional drilled, plowed, or pulled into an existing conduit. When branching 
individual MicroDucts, there is no need for a special branching box. No special 
tools or equipment are required for installation.





From: AF <[email protected]> on behalf of Mike Hammett <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 3:23 PM 
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group <[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] how is underground FTTH done? 

It's becoming increasingly common to install a 24-way multiduct through the 
easement, fed from a neighborhood-scale handhole. The drop installer digs up 
the multiduct, couples a drop duct to one of the 24 microducts in the main 
conduit, then installs that conduit to the NID. Buries the whole thing. They 
then blow the fiber from that neighborhood handhole to the NID, splice it in, 
and call it a day. 




-- 
Mike Hammett 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Carl Peterson" <[email protected]> 
To: "AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 2:17:09 PM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] how is underground FTTH done? 



This might now work in NY where I seem to remember Adam operates, but Fidium 
did an interesting half assed fiber deployment in my neighborhood where they 
installed secondary drop ducts in the right of way and just left them stubbed 
up underground. So say 1 ped which feeds the properties on either side + tw 
drop ducts in either direction each which stubs up between the next two houses 
so ~ 8-10 subs per ped. When they need to install, they just hook up a 
compressor to the sub duct and it blows the dirt up in the air exposing the 
drop duct. 


On Mon, Aug 18, 2025 at 12:07 PM Adam Moffett < [email protected] > wrote: 





Well, you can't trespass with your service drop cable. If it crosses someone 
else's property it needs an easement. I think most commonly you place a 
handhole at the property line so you can hit two houses from one. One box per 
house might be necessary in some cases, and there might be cases where you can 
hit more than two from one box, but not every time. 


They might not have a splitter in that box. It might just provide a pulling 
point to get the service drop from there down the street to another box where 
the splitter is. It depends on the density and whether they'd rather load all 
the costs up front or push more of the costs into the installation phase. 


When we were small-fries we would push the cost to the installation so we're 
not spending money on customers we never sell. I'm at a bigger outfit now, and 
they'll make sure there's a splitter port near every customer, and each one 
gets documented as to which house it's for. They'll send info to the drop 
contractor telling them exactly which splitter location to send the drop cable 
to, and what path it should take. The light budget is set so you could add a 
1x4 at the house.....a problem we run into is houses divided into multiple 
rentals are not always obvious up front, and you find out about them only when 
the installer is on site. 


As someone said, there are a zillion ways to do it, and someone does it every 
which way you can imagine. 


-Adam 







From: AF < [email protected] > on behalf of Ken Hohhof < [email protected] 
> 
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 12:13 PM 
To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' < [email protected] > 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] how is underground FTTH done? 


OK, that helps. I assume MST avoids every installer having the equipment and 
training to do fusion splices. 



But I’m still not understanding in an underground scenario, with a handhole at 
every passing, what do you splice the drop cable to, and where? Is there a pre 
installed fiber stub in every handhole for that customer, going back to a 
splitter at another handhole down the street? 




From: AF < [email protected] > On Behalf Of Josh Luthman 
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 10:40 AM 
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group < [email protected] > 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] how is underground FTTH done? 



Splitters are waaay small. Smaller than a standard house key. 



What you are looking at is an MST terminal, looks like 8 ports. There can be a 
splitter inside of that yes. You can have the MST with 8 fibers splice to 
another 8 fibers or you can have what is in your picture have 1 fiber in, split 
1x8, and then have 8 ports out for the installers to simply plug in to. 



If that MST is a 1x8, you can have a 1x4 before it, between the MST and OLT. 
That makes for OLT -> 1x4 splitter -> 1x8 splitter/MST. That is still a 1x32 
split. 



On Mon, Aug 18, 2025 at 11:34 AM Ken Hohhof < [email protected] > wrote: 



I thought PON used like 16:1 or 32:1 splitters, and in this photo, I assumed 
that’s what the black boxes were. 




From: AF < [email protected] > On Behalf Of Josh Luthman 
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 10:16 AM 
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group < [email protected] > 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] how is underground FTTH done? 



Don't assume that about aerial. That's not how it works. Don't think about it 
in terms of taps. 



Generally speaking, installations are PON. What we do is design the fiber so we 
can hook up 100% of homes. We assign a color to every house. 



The first thing to think about is that you have to access the individual strand 
out of the cable, be it 12/24/48/144/etc. That is done with a SpliceCase or you 
splice on an MST for an ez mode plug. At Imagine we only splice - no 
connectors, no MST, no plugs, etc. 


Second thing is that when there's a cable up and down the road, you just need 
access to it through the case/MST from the house. This can be from the house to 
the handhole (concrete box in the ground) or you can run it from the house to 
the handhole through some 1.25" duct to the next handhole where there is one 
case. 



I can show you what it looks like if you don't get it yet. 



On Mon, Aug 18, 2025 at 11:11 AM Ken Hohhof < [email protected] > wrote: 



The fiber train left without me, so maybe someone here can help me understand 
how the physical installation is typically done. 



I’ve seen aerial fiber and it’s pretty straightforward, I see splitters up on 
poles maybe at each intersection, and to hook up a customer, they run a drop 
wire from the nearest splitter to the house. If take rate is better than 
expected or a new house is built, worst case I assume they just add a splitter. 



But I also see FTTH deployments going in where they are boring for duct in the 
ROW and putting a little handhole in front of every house. How does this work? 
Are they using taps instead of splitters? If not, when they get a customer 
install order, do they pull his drop cable through all the handholes to a 
splitter? That doesn’t seem feasible. Are they dedicating a strand to each 
house and pulling the main cable out each time and splicing to that strand? And 
what if they estimate the take rate wrong, or a new house is built? 



There’s probably a simple explanation and once someone enlightens me it will be 
a Duh! moment. 

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Carl Peterson 


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