Facebook creates robot to wrap fibre over live power lines

New process said to lower cost by a factor of between three and five times.

By Chris Duckett | July 14, 2020 -- 05:30 GMT (15:30 AEST) |
https://www.zdnet.com/article/facebook-creates-robot-to-wrap-fibre-over-live-power-lines/


Facebook Connectivity, in league with ULC Robotics, has developed a robot 
capable of winding optical fibre on live medium voltage (MV) power lines that 
typically serve residential areas in much of the world, at a claimed cost three 
to five times cheaper than traditional aerial fibre construction.

Karthik Yogeeswaran, wireless systems engineer at Facebook Connectivity, said 
in a blog post the idea for the project came after travelling through rural 
Africa and noticing the ubiquity of power line infrastructure, which is far 
"more pervasive than the total fibre footprint of the country".

In order to keep costs down, Facebook needed to lower the preparatory and 
manual work needed to wind fibre around power lines, and to minimise disruption 
of electrical services, the robot needed to able to do its job on a live line 
and be able to avoid and cross obstacles it encountered.

Keeping the weight of the robot within the limits that a medium voltage power 
line could handle was a key challenge because it would limit the amount of 
fibre it could carry, so the size of the cable needed to be reduced.

"Using the MV power line as a support adds a number of additional challenges. 
The first is the voltage stress. MV conductors can have a voltage as high as 
35kV which can cause degradation phenomena such as tracking, partial discharge, 
and dry band arcing," Yogeeswaran said.

"The power line can also see elevated temperatures far above the melting point 
of typical fibre-optic jackets, and the stretching of the power line due to 
thermal changes and wind-induced aeolian vibration can induce strain on the 
fibres."

The end result was a cable using G.657-compliant 200-micron fibres with a 
special jacket weighing 28 pounds for a 1km span.

To be able to navigate obstacles, the robot can lift its middle section that 
contains the fibre and rotation systems, before passing it and lowering its 
middle to continue wrapping. The robot has a vision system to identify 
obstacles and adjust its movements.

"To account for the human interaction steps such as setup, loading and 
unloading the robot, installing transitions, etc., we have been conservatively 
estimating an overall build speed of 1.5km to 2km per robot per day on 
average," Yogeeswaran said.

"While traditional aerial fibre deployment involves heavy machinery, reel 
carts, large spools, and large crew sizes, a fibre deployment crew deploying 
our solution, will comprise two or three electric utility linemen and a pickup 
truck with a few kilometre spools of fibre, a robot, and a few accessories, 
allowing many crews to work in parallel."

In developing countries, Yogeeswaran said the total cost including labour of 
running the robot would be between $2 and $3 per metre.

"By lowering the total cost of aerial fibre deployment, we expect that our 
system will have a significant impact on internet penetration, especially among 
the half of the world earning less than $5.50 per day," he said.

"While we still have a number of steps to complete before our first deployment, 
we have confidence that this approach will yield a substantial improvement to 
both the cost and speed of fibre deployments."

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