How do I select the right cable construction and rating (tight-buffer vs loose-tube, indoor/outdoor, plenum/ris er, armored)?
- Application/termination
- Tight-buffer: Best for indoor, short runs, frequent handling, easy field termination, patch cords, intra-building runs, interconnects.
- Loose-tube: Best for outdoor/long runs, higher fiber counts, better temperature/water protection; splice to pigtails at building entry.
- Location/environment
- Indoor only: Use tight-buffer (or indoor-rated loose-tube) with OFNP (plenum), OFNR (riser), or OFNG (general) as code requires.
- Outdoor only: Use loose-tube, UV-rated jacket, water-blocked (gel or gel-free), wide temp range.
- Indoor–outdoor: Use dual-rated indoor/outdoor cable to avoid transition splice at entry.
- Building codes (check NEC/CEC/local)
- Plenum spaces (air return): OFNP/FT6 or LSZH plenum if required.
- Riser shafts: OFNR/FT4.
- General horizontal: OFNG/CMG or better. Higher ratings may substitute for lower (e.g., plenum can be used in riser).
- Mechanical protection
- Armored: Use in areas with rodents, crush risk, or direct-burial; choose dielectric armor near power to avoid induced voltages.
- Non-armored: Use in protected conduit or trays.
- Pathway/installation
- Conduit/duct: Loose-tube gel-free, high pulling strength; consider micro-duct for blown fiber.
- Aerial: Figure-8/self-supporting with messenger; meet ice/wind loads.
- Direct burial: Armored, water-blocked, with moisture barrier and robust jacket.
- Indoor patching: Tight-buffer, flexible, smaller bend radius.
- Performance/compatibility
- Match fiber type and count (OS2 single-mode, OM3/OM4/OM5 multimode) to optics.
- Check minimum bend radius, pull tension, temperature range, flame rating, and UV resistance.
- For PoE/EMI proximity: Prefer dielectric armor/jackets.
- Cost/maintenance
- Tight-buffer higher per-fiber cost but cheaper termination.
- Loose-tube cheaper per fiber for long/high-count runs; plan for splicing hardware.
- Documentation
- Label pathways, maintain test results, and keep fire-stop and entry transition records.