Out here in Manitoba we use unheated/no-electricity OSP fiber patch panel 
pedestals in some locations, those work without issue down to the occasional 
-40. Note that that’s using all high-quality components.

 

For Fletcher’s case, it’s also possible that:

-there had been water intrusion in a splice case or cable on the way – but then 
that tends to cause complete failure, either on the first occasion or not long 
after, and not repeating temperature-dependent fade.

-there’s a bad fusion splice on the way whose characteristics are affected by 
temperature.

 

My first step in such a case would be to OTDR the line (renting an OTDR if we 
were a company that didn’t own one) to see approximately where the issue is and 
to get an idea what kind of issue it is – Fletcher, I guess that your company 
did not do so at that time?

 

 

From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Mel Beckman
Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2019 12:26 PM
To: Fletcher Kittredge <fkitt...@gwi.net>
Cc: North American Network Operators' Group <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: Effects of Cold Front on Internet Infrastructure - U.S. Midwest

 

Fletcher, 

 

I don’t think that’s true. I find no specs on fiber dB loss being a function of 
ambient temperature. I do find fiber optic application data sheets for extreme 
temperature applications of -500F and +500F (spacecraft). You’d think if 
temperature affected fiber transmission characteristics, they’d see it in space.

 

What you likely were seeing was connector loss, owing either to improper 
installation, incorrect materials, or unheated regen enclosures.

 

Insertion loss (IL) failures, for instance, in the cold are a direct result of 
cable termination component shrinkage. That’s why regen and patch enclosures 
need to be heated as well as cooled. 


All fiber termination components have stated temperature limits. As 
temperatures approach -40F, the thermoplastic components in a cable's breakout, 
jacketing, and fiber fanout sections shrink more than the optical glass. 
Ruggedized connectors help somewhat, but the rule is that you can’t let optical 
connectors and assemblies get really cold (or really hot).

 

A typical spec for a single-mode OSP connector is:

 

Operating -30C (-22F) to +60C (+140F)

 

The range for the corresponding Single Mode fiber is:

 

Operating -55C (-67F) to +70C (+158F)
Storage -60C (-76F) to +70C (+158F)
Installation -30C (-22F) to +50C (+122F)

All professional outside plant engineers know these requirements. So if you’re 
seeing failures, somebody is breaking a rule.

 

 -mel

 

 

On Jan 30, 2019, at 3:05 PM, Fletcher Kittredge <fkitt...@gwi.net 
<mailto:fkitt...@gwi.net> > wrote:

 

 

Cold changes the transmission characteristics of fiber. At one point we were 
renting some old dark fiber from the local telephone company in northern Maine. 
When it would get below -15%-degree F the dB would get bad enough that the link 
using that fiber would stop working. The telephone company was selling us dark 
fiber because regulation required them to. They refused to give us another 
fiber nor inspect/repair. They took the position they were required to sell us 
fiber, not working fiber.

 

 

On Wed, Jan 30, 2019 at 11:41 AM Mark Tinka <mark.ti...@seacom.mu 
<mailto:mark.ti...@seacom.mu> > wrote:

For anyone running IP networks in the Midwest, are you having to do anything 
special to keep your networks up?

For the data centres, is this cold front a chance to reduce air conditioning 
costs, or is it actually straining the infrastructure?

I'm curious, from a +27-degree C summer's day here in Johannesburg.

Mark.




 

-- 

Fletcher Kittredge
GWI
207-602-1134

www.gwi.net <http://www.gwi.net/> 

 

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