We use them on thousands of outdoor ONTs.  Never a problem.  

From: Trey Scarborough 
Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2017 2:43 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Splice on Connectors

I can say from experience that I would not use Uni-cams in an outdoor cabinet. 
I have had many of them fail. The other issue you get with them is that they 
can cause issues with DWDM systems if you ever plan on using something like 
that at the sight. if you are using them for the bottom of a tower your failure 
rate will probably not be that big of an issue. It takes many years and won't 
be a pig deal for short connections. I haven't really experienced the degrade 
over time or noticed it at least. it seems to be more it works fine one day the 
next you get 10db of los through a connector. 


If you are going to direct fiber SOC connectors be aware they are typically 
longer and less flexible at the boot as a normal jumper. so if you are real 
tight on space make sure you have plenty of room from your equipment to the 
door of the cabinet...

If you are short on space in a cabinet you can always put a splice outside and 
get a premade jumper. That is what I would recommend. 


On 3/29/2017 10:35 AM, Adam Moffett wrote:

  I just watched a video.  The installation tool for Unicam looks really slick.

  It appears to be a mechanical connection with index matching gel.  The same 
vendor pushing SOC's was poo-pooing mechanical connections.  They say the index 
matching gel changes from clear to clearish/brownish as it ages.  The claim is 
that after enough years you start getting a significant attenuation, whereas a 
fusion splice is permanent.  They didn't quantify the loss/year.



  ------ Original Message ------
  From: [email protected]
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: 3/29/2017 11:10:04 AM
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Splice on Connectors

    We use Unicams everywhere.  

    From: Adam Moffett 
    Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2017 9:01 AM
    To: Animal Farm 
    Subject: [AFMUG] Splice on Connectors

    I have a vendor who's really pimping their SOC's.  The idea is you can 
splice the connector onto a 900um fiber and then plug directly into your 
electronics.  No splice tray. 

    So in theory I could put a fan out kit on each buffer tube coming into an 
enclosure and then with SOC's go directly into the switch.  I do have a space 
limitation at the moment (long story), so eliminating splice trays and patch 
panels is sounding really good right now.

    Does anybody love/hate SOC's?  

    Also how does the splice in the SOC not need additional support when a 
normal splice sleeve does? Does the connector body really protect it well 
enough?

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