The original rule of thumb was something to do with what size stick you
can use to beat your wife/kids without breaking the law. 144 strand
loose tube is about the size of a thumb, so in some jurisdictions you
might have been able to discipline your family with it. Say hi to your
thumb for me.
Aerial is cheaper if you have pole attachment rights. You don't need
pole attachment rights (or any special rights) to bury in a ROW, but you
can point at it when some guvmint goon questions you. It looks kind of
official.
On 6/30/2015 12:04 PM, That One Guy /sarcasm wrote:
Say you want to run fiber for 10 miles.
Aside from the boring equipment and permits what does that entail?
I know there are 36 bazillion answers, but humor me.
Details like how often you need handholes and how to deal with
slacking for cut fiber splicing would be very helpful.
What is a rule of thumb in your long term planning on how often you
can expect a fiber cut. (an example of rule of thumb is I expect a
storm related issue at least once every three years at every site,
there is no actual science, or math, I just look at my thumb and it
provides me sage answers)
--
If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your
team as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.