careful with pull tape in plowed in fiber.
we plowed in some (pulling the fiber as we plowed.)
this stretched the duct & when we cut the duct to go under the road, the pull tape would get pulled into the conduit.
we had to pull it out & blow a pull tape in anyway.
 
 
roland
 
> Yeah the blowing machine is expensive, but the company selling the HDPE
conduit can put a pull tape (up to 5000 lb) into the conduit for extra money.
If I only have to add pull tape to bored sections under driveways, I can do
that easily with a fish tape. Then I'd use a capstan to pull the whole run
through.

For background, I'm looking at a relatively small project: about a mile. That's
why one machine that plows and drills seems attractive on the surface....and
why more cost for a conduit with a pull tape already in looks better to me than
a blowing machine.

On depth I don't really know for sure. Good question. I have a few different
conflicting sources.

On 4/6/2016 11:39 AM, Chris Fabien wrote:

You can definitely plow in conduit. If you're going to do it that way you would
want to look into blowing in the fiber after all the conduit is placed. This is
a nice approach because you can splice/couple conduit very easily so the switch
between plow and drill is not a big deal. Then once all the conduit is in the
ground and coupled together, you can blow fiber in through the whole run in one
shot. The blowing equipment is fairly expensive but I would think you canrent
that.

Do you have a requirement for how deep you need to be placing your cable? A
small plow like that could pull short sections of conduit at 18" or maybe up to
24" deep. If you need to go any deeper you'll need a much larger plow.

On Wed, Apr 6, 2016 at 11:31 AM, Adam Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:

That's good advice, thanks.

I see what you're saying about laying out the whole run at the first obstruction
and what a pain that would be.

I pictured plowing in an HDPE conduit with a pull tape in it rather than plowing
cable directly into the ground. So I'd be pulling the entire run off a reel
trailer either way. At the moment this projectexists mostly in my imagination
so if plowing in conduit is a dumb idea, this would be a perfect time to tell
me. :)

The discussion about whether you should drill or plow a certain stretch is
subjective. Remember that every time you plow and need to go under an obstacle
you have to figure 8 the whole cable run, or cut and have a splice point there.
That can be a lot of labor if you're trying to keep a long run intact.
Personally, when we are running in a rural area, if we have driveways every
200-400ft we drill that area. If we can go 800ft or more without obstructions
then we plow that.

Chris <



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