I am trying to save the money on building my own stuff.  But yeah, a nice lean 
model with best practices and procedures will work both ways.  Most fiber 
contractors I know are very busy.

From: Bill Prince 
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2017 12:03 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] FTTH construction tiger team

As time goes on, it appears that this will be a great opportunity for someone 
to come up with a model to do fiber build outs as a service to others. If you 
can figure out where all the time goes and eliminate that part of it , you 
might be able to make some real $$$.

-bp



On Thursday, March 30, 2017 10:56 AM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:




But I do not want to pay them to make a profit doing this.  I want it done at 
cost.  

From: Josh Reynolds 
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2017 11:52 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] FTTH construction tiger team

There are companies that already do this. They contract for CenturyLink, AT&T, 
Time Warner, etc. We hired one to do all of our outside plant. 

Lots of 💰 to be made if you do it right and have a good crew. They always hire 
local labor for ditch digging, but their splice crews and management are 
continuous.

On Mar 30, 2017 12:50 PM, "Chuck McCown" <[email protected]> wrote:

  I am considering building a construction team that can drop into a small town 
or large subdivision, install fiber and move on.  
  Something where I own the construction equipment and keep labor costs low.  
Want to identify the minimum equipment necessary and the methods of 
construction to provide the best value.  

  HDD with mud truck
  Do we need a vacuum excavator?
  Mini excavator
  One of these drop plows.  Whoever said their guy can do 5-8 homes per day.... 
yeah that one (to lazy to search who it was).

  What to use for hand holes?
  Plastic hand holes?

  What are the best values for splice cases?

  Perhaps try UBNT GPON.  Can always throw it in the ditch if it does not work.

  So a best practices/FTTH in a box schedule of equipment and methods is 
needed.  From that I will look at the ROI needed from the equipment as well as 
the labor costs to estimate the costs to do a subdivision.  

  From that we will look at the ROI on a competitive ARPU to see if an area is 
worth doing.  
  I keep getting asked to do this, so I guess I better do this.  


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