I’m a little bit confused here. Doing some research on how FTTP works:
So, an OLT port provides a single fibre to an SASA. (The SASA is in a cabinet, I assume). The SASA then splits this into 30 separate fibres. Each fibre then goes to a CBT that provides the connection to the home. Fine so far, (I think).
However, I see CBTs come in 4, 8 and 12 port and pictures appear to show a single input and multiple output ports on these devices.
So, my question is, is it one fibre from the SASA that is then split again by the CBT or does a 4 port CBT (for example) require 4 fibres feeding it to provide the 4 outputs? (It maybe that the "single" input is actually one cable with multiple fibres, of course).
I'd be grateful if anyone could clarify this point for me please.
Solved! Go to Solution.
SASA are in a enclosure (Node ) not a cabinet , they are passive, not requiring power so no need to put them in something like a cabinet….large and extra large Nodes are always mounted underground, small and medium nodes can be mounted on a telegraph pole as well as underground , UG Nodes are mounted in underground structures (jointboxes ).
Although a single cable enters a CBT , it’s a multi fibre cable (12 fibres ) only the required nunber of fibres are spliced through at the Node , so for example, if a CBT had a ‘demand’ of 7 addresses , an 8 port CBT is used , ( it has a 12 fibre tail ) , 7 of the 12 fibres in that tail are spliced through from splitter outputs to the CBT , making 7 ports on the CBT ‘live’ , fibres 8-12 usually put into storage in the Node , ports 7 & 8 on the CBT are ‘dark’ , no light present on them .
The size of CBT is determined by the number of addresses it’s designed to service ( ‘the demand’ )
Excellent. Thanks for the prompt reply.
I'd give you a thumb up but it doesn't seem to be available.