Had a guy try super glue.
-- Best regards, Mark mailto:[email protected] Myakka Technologies, Inc. www.MyakkaTech.com Proud Sponsor of the Myakka City Relay For Life http://www.RelayForLife.org/MyakkaCityFL Please Donate at http://main.acsevents.org/site/TR/RelayForLife/RFLFY12FL?team_id=1030009&pg=team&fr_id=37555 ------ Tuesday, February 10, 2015, 11:08:56 AM, you wrote: TOG> have you come across anybody who tried to splice their own TOG> fiber with redcaps like they do with Ethernet? TOG> On Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 9:12 AM, Chris Fabien <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> We run fiber inside. Wall mount the CPE, bend insensitive TOG> tight buffer cable with field installed connection, stapled to TOG> wall so it can't get snagged. Educate customer it is not user TOG> serviceable and provide costs for a service call to re-terminate TOG> or splice fiber. No problems yet. Some resistance to having a TOG> router mounted to their wall but we explain it's safest and they TOG> are usually OK.ᅵ TOG> On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 12:40 PM, Jason Pond TOG> <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> We are planning on running fiber to inside.ᅵ We will be TOG> using bend insensitive and labeling DO NOT TOUCH.ᅵ There should TOG> be no reason for the customer to touch the fiber. TOG> I know Chuck Hogg does it this way also and as far as I TOG> know he has not had any problems. TOG> Sincerely, TOG> ᅵ TOG> Jason Pond TOG> Grizzly Internet, Inc TOG> On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 10:33 AM, That One Guy TOG> <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> I was asking Jason Pond, it sounds like he runs fiber to the inside TOG> On Mon, Feb 9, 2015 at 10:27 AM, TJ Trout <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> They change to cat 5 on the outside of the house TOG> On Feb 9, 2015 7:37 AM, "That One Guy" TOG> <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> How do you protect the fiber from the customer in the house TOG> as far as keeping them from sullying up the glass connecting and TOG> disconnecting it? Do you find as high an incidence of cut fiber TOG> in the home as with Ethernet runs or do customers seem to be more TOG> wary of the fiber run? TOG> On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 3:08 PM, Jason Pond TOG> <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> SEE INLINE RED TOG> 1. Would you be able to make those power points available TOG> to the list? ᅵI LEAVE THIS TO STERLING AND CHUCK TO POST TOG> 2. What all equipment do you actually have at the house? TOG> Are you running the fiber up to the house and then making it the TOG> customers responsibility from there? Or are you running some TOG> interior Ethernet cable for people? TOG> So this depends a little on setup but for the most part you TOG> need to have an outside NID box, and maybe outside ONT for a GPON TOG> setup, ᅵ In Sterling's case he was putting a RB250GS in an TOG> outdoor enclosure and ethernet inside to a WiFi router I think of TOG> customer choosing.ᅵ We are taking a different approach and TOG> putting a RB2011 inside with Fiber going all the way to the TOG> inside of the house and managing the customer router for them. ᅵ TOG> 3. Could I get a rough list of what is actually going in the neighborhood peds? TOG> There are pedestals/vault and cabinets.ᅵ Inside a TOG> peds/vault there is just fiber maybe a splice case or MST box TOG> depending on the design.ᅵ Cabinets on the other hand need TOG> equipment to do the following: Access to you network and to feed TOG> your network out to the customer.ᅵ I.E. EDGE/CORE Router hooked TOG> to fiber or wireless devices to receive the internet / network TOG> feed and if you are doing an Active Ethernet setup like Sterling TOG> and Chuck Hogg you need multi-port SFP switches.ᅵ Each SFP port TOG> goes to a customer.ᅵ Single fiber to each household / business. TOG> 4. Are you still able to use Powercode (or whatever you are TOG> using for your wireless customers) for your TOG> billing/monitoring/rates? Or did you have to get a secondary TOG> system to handle the fiber customers? TOG> Powercode is just a customer management system w/ billing TOG> so yes you can use it and you can keep track of all of your TOG> details in it also.ᅵ I.E. Tube # / Color / Fiber strand to which TOG> customer and what port they are plugged into the switch TOG> 5. How are you keeping track of where your underground TOG> facilities are for years down the road? Are you using GPS TOG> coordinates at endpoints and service connections, measurements TOG> off of cross streets, or just planning to be able to use a TOG> locator to find it? TOG> Some are using google maps, others surveying, we will be TOG> using a GPS tracking software kept in a database tracked through TOG> iDevices with GPS bluetooth "pucks" ᅵthis will be exported into TOG> google maps and KML format when done for future needs.ᅵ I will TOG> have this system available for use later in the year with a lot TOG> more details after our build gets underway. TOG> Just like in wireless you can skin the cat a million ways TOG> everyone has a different take and we hope to help anywhere we can TOG> as our project gets underway this summer. TOG> Sincerely, TOG> ᅵ TOG> Jason Pond TOG> Grizzly Internet, Inc TOG> On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 5:36 AM, Trevor Bough TOG> <[email protected]> wrote: TOG> Hey guys, I really enjoyed the fiber build out forum and TOG> have come up with a few questions since lunch yesterday: TOG> 1. Would you be able to make those power points available to the list? TOG> 2. What all equipment do you actually have at the house? TOG> Are you running the fiber up to the house and then making it the TOG> customers responsibility from there? Or are you running some TOG> interior Ethernet cable for people? TOG> 3. Could I get a rough list of what is actually going in the neighborhood peds? TOG> 4. Are you still able to use Powercode (or whatever you are TOG> using for your wireless customers) for your TOG> billing/monitoring/rates? Or did you have to get a secondary TOG> system to handle the fiber customers? TOG> 5. How are you keeping track of where your underground TOG> facilities are for years down the road? Are you using GPS TOG> coordinates at endpoints and service connections, measurements TOG> off of cross streets, or just planning to be able to use a TOG> locator to find it? TOG> -- TOG> All parts should go together without forcing. You must TOG> remember that the parts you are reassembling were disassembled by TOG> you. Therefore, if you can't get them together again, there must TOG> be a reason. By all means, do not use a hammer. -- IBM TOG> maintenance manual, 1925 TOG> -- TOG> All parts should go together without forcing. You must TOG> remember that the parts you are reassembling were disassembled by TOG> you. Therefore, if you can't get them together again, there must TOG> be a reason. By all means, do not use a hammer. -- IBM TOG> maintenance manual, 1925 --- This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active. http://www.avast.com
