PREPARATION OF FIBER OPTIC CABLES FOR DUCT APPLICATIONS
20210149142 ยท 2021-05-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02B6/25
PHYSICS
G02B6/245
PHYSICS
International classification
G02B6/44
PHYSICS
G02B6/245
PHYSICS
G02B6/25
PHYSICS
Abstract
Before pulling a leading end of a fiber optic cable through a duct in order to splice the cable fibers to other fibers located at a far end of the duct, the outer jacket of the cable and elements surrounding the cable fibers are removed to expose the fibers. The exposed fibers are prepared by (a) removing coatings on the fibers, (b) cleaving the ends of the fibers, and (c) placing the cleaved fibers into one or more protective covers. A cable grip or sock is dimensioned and formed to envelop the leading end of the cable including the protective covers, up to and including the outer jacket. The grip together with the cable are pulled through the duct, and the grip and the protective covers are removed at the far end of the duct to expose the cleaved fibers for splicing to the other fibers at the far end.
Claims
1. A method of pulling a fiber optic cable through a duct so that fibers of the cable are ready for splicing to other fibers at a far end of the duct, comprising: providing a fiber optic cable having an outer jacket and containing a number of fibers; prior to pulling a leading end of the cable through a given duct, removing a determined length of the outer jacket at the leading end, thereby exposing a number of cable elements that surround the fibers; removing the exposed cable elements to expose the fibers, and preparing the exposed fibers by (a) removing coatings on the ends of the fibers, (b) cleaving each of the ends of the fibers, and (c) placing the cleaved ends of the fibers into one or more protective covers; fixing a grip or sock over the leading end of the cable including the protective covers, up to and including the outer jacket of the cable; pulling the grip together with the cable through the duct to exit at the far end of the duct; and removing the grip and the protective covers at the far end of the duct, thereby exposing the cleaved ends of the cable fibers for splicing to other fibers at the far end of the duct.
2. The method of claim 1, including forming the protective covers from plastics sleeves, tubing, a gel, or foam.
3. The method of claim 1, including providing the protective covers in the form of optical fiber holders.
4. The method of claim 1, including arranging the other fibers at the far end of the duct in cabinet/shelf apparatus located at the far end of the duct.
5. The method of claim 1, including fusion splicing the exposed cleaved ends of the cable fibers to the other fibers at the far end of the duct.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the fiber optic cable is provided with one or more optical fiber ribbons.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the optical fiber ribbons are rollable ribbons.
8. A fiber optic cable arrangement, comprising: a fiber optic cable having an outer jacket, a number of fibers, and a number of cable elements that surround the fibers; a leading end of the cable is configured so that a determined length of the outer jacket and the cable elements are removed, and end lengths of the fibers are exposed; the exposed end lengths of the fibers are prepared so that (a) coatings on the end lengths of the fibers are removed, (b) the end lengths are cleaved, and (c) the cleaved end lengths are disposed inside one or more protective covers; and a pulling grip or sock constructed and arranged to envelop the leading end of the cable including the protective covers and to be fixed to an end portion of the cable outer jacket; wherein the grip including the leading end of the cable are configured for pulling through a given duct, and the cleaved end lengths of the fibers are ready for splicing to other fibers at a far end of the duct when the grip and the protective covers are removed at the far end.
9. A fiber optic cable arrangement according to claim 8, wherein the protective covers in which the cleaved end lengths of the fibers are disposed, comprise plastics sleeves, tubing, foam, or a gel.
10. A fiber optic cable arrangement according to claim 8, wherein the protective covers in which the cleaved end lengths of the fibers are disposed, comprise optical fiber holders.
11. A fiber optic cable arrangement according to claim 8, wherein the pulling grip comprises a mesh sock a proximal end of which is fixed to the outer jacket of the cable.
12. A fiber optic cable arrangement according to claim 11, wherein a distal end of the mesh sock is formed into an eyelet for engaging a cord to pull the grip including the fiber optic cable through the duct.
13. A fiber optic cable arrangement according to claim 8, wherein the fiber optic cable contains one or more optical fiber ribbons.
14. A fiber optic cable arrangement according to claim 13, wherein the optical fiber ribbons are rollable ribbons.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
[0013] In the drawing:
[0014]
[0015]
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[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] The present invention reduces installation time in the field by preparing the fibers at a leading end of a fiber optic cable for splicing to other fibers at a far end of a duct, before the cable is pulled through the duct. The time required by an installer at the far end of the duct to splice the fibers at the leading end of the cable to the other fibers is therefore substantially reduced.
[0022] The invention can be used advantageously with fiber optic cables like the earlier mentioned DuctSaver and others that contain optical fiber ribbons capable of being fusion spliced to other fibers, when the ribbons are laid flat and the fibers are separated from one another. See U.S. Pat. No. 8,548,294 (Oct. 1, 2013); U.S. Pat. No. 10,379,306 (Aug. 13, 2019); and U.S. Pat. No. 10,649,163 (May 12, 2020), all of which are incorporated by reference.
[0023] According to the invention, prior to pulling a fiber optic cable such as, e.g., the cable 10 through a duct, the cable jacket 12, central core or tube 18, strength elements 20, and any water-blocking material 16 or armor in a leading end of the cable are removed. The fibers of the ribbons 14 are exposed over a determined length so as to fit, for example, into fusion splice trays arranged at the far end of a duct through which the leading end of the cable is pulled. Coatings on the fibers are removed, and the fibers are precision cut using, e.g., a conventional optical fiber cleaver tool. As a result, an installer at the far end of the duct no longer needs to spend time preparing the leading end of the cable further by removing the cable jacket and other elements that surround the cable fibers, exposing the fibers, and cleaving the fibers before splicing them to other fibers at the far end of the duct.
[0024]
[0025] A leading end 130 of the cable 110 is configured so that determined lengths of the outer jacket 112, the strength members 120, the central core 118, and the water blocking tape 116 are removed, thereby exposing end lengths of the optical fiber ribbons 114. One of the exposed ribbons, ribbon 114a, is shown enlarged and in flat or unfolded form in the right half of
[0026] Optical fibers of the exposed ribbon 114a are prepared so that (a) previously applied coatings on the end lengths of the fibers are removed, (b) the end lengths of the fibers are cleaved, and (c) the cleaved end lengths of the fibers are placed inside one or more protective covers 132. The covers 132 are formed and dimensioned to prevent the cleaved fibers from getting dirty or damaged, and to keep the covered fibers isolated inside a pulling grip or sock to be applied afterward (see
[0027]
[0028] As a further alternative, and instead of using either of the rigid covers 132a or 132b, or applying a tape, foam, or gel to the area of the cleaved fibers before pulling the cable 110 through a duct, the ends of the fibers of each ribbon 114 may be protected by inserting the fibers into a holder 140 such as, e.g., a 250 micron coating fiber holder such as shown in
[0029]
[0030] A distal end 154 of the sock 150 is capped with an eyelet 151. The sock 150 together with the leading end 130 of the cable 110 can then be pulled through a duct 160 by way of a cord 152 attached to the eyelet 151 at the distal end 154 of the sock. The pulling force applied by the cord 152 is distributed over the sock 150 and down to the cable 110 so that the force does not act directly on the cable fibers 114. When the grip 150 is pulled to exit at the far end on the duct 160 and the protective covers 132 are removed, the exposed fibers of the cable will be ready for splicing to other fibers at the far end.
[0031] Splicing of the cable fibers 114 to the other fibers at the far end of the duct 160 may be achieved by traditional fusion methods using plasma arc, or by alternative methods such as, e.g., placing the fibers into trays and fusing them by a liquid chemical bonding process wherein the trays house clad alignment devices to aid in the bonding process, or by mechanical splicing using aligned v-grooves in separate splice trays. A mechanical splice mechanism may also be provided within the mesh sock 150 before the leading end 130 of the cable 110 is pulled through the duct 160.
[0032] The exposed fibers may, for example, be fusion spliced to unprepared or factory prepared fibers of a second cable whose fibers are disposed within a frame management system, similar to a known Multi-Access Modular Unit (MAMU) system at the far end of the duct 160. The system may comprise pre-terminated or connectorized optical fanouts wherein the connector ends are mounted into an optical distribution frame, and the second cable end is a bare ribbon. In this scenario, the second cable end may also be factory-prepared and ready for placement into a fusion splice machine.
[0033] While the foregoing represents preferred embodiments of the present invention, it will be understood by persons skilled in the art that various changes, modifications, and additions such as those suggested herein can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the invention is also applicable to standard flat ribbon cables, and to non-ribbon cables containing individual, non-bonded fibers. Accordingly, the invention includes all such changes, modifications, and additions as are within the bounds of the following claims.