FTTH 4CORES FIBER ACCESS TERMINAL
Water-proof design with IP-66 Protection level.
Integrated with splice cassette and cable management rods.
Manage fibers in a reasonable fiber radius condition.
Easy to maintain and extend the capacity.
Fiber bend radius control more than 40mm.
Suitable for the fusion splice or mechanical splice.
1*4 Splitter can be installed as an option.
Efficient cable management.
4 ports cable entrance for drop cable.
MODEL |
3C-FAT-4A/B/C |
Suitable Fiber Type |
3.0*2.0 flat able |
Cable Diameter |
Distribution:12mm Drop:2*3mm |
Capacity 4 |
SC/ 8LC/1:4 PLC Splitter |
IP Grade |
IP66 |
Material |
PC+ABS |
Size(A*B*C) |
A: 186*116*40mm
B: 190*120*44mm
C: 190*55*41mm |
Weight |
0.8KG |
Suitable Adapter |
SC Simplex / LC Duplex |
Operating Temperature |
-40~+85 |
Installation Size |
A/B: D(mm)195
C: D(mm)205 |
Color |
Light Gray |
FTTH (fiber-to-the-home): Fiber reaches the boundary of the living space, such as a box on the outside wall of a home. Passive optical networks and point-to-point Ethernet are architectures that are capable of delivering triple-play services over FTTH networks directly from an operator's central office.
FTTB (fiber-to-the-building, -business, or -basement): Fiber reaches the boundary of the building, such as the basement in a multi-dwelling unit, with the final connection to the individual living space being made via alternative means, similar to the curb or pole technologies
FTTN / FTTLA (fiber-to-the-node, -neighborhood, or -last-amplifier): Fiber is terminated in a street cabinet, possibly miles away from the customer premises, with the final connections being copper. FTTN is often an interim step toward full FTTH (fiber-to-the-home) and is typically used to deliver 'advanced' triple-play telecommunications services
FTTC (fiber-to-the-curb, -closet, or -cabinet): This is very similar to FTTN, but the street cabinet or pole is closer to the user's premises, typically within 1,000 feet (300 m), within range for high-bandwidth copper technologies such as wired Ethernet or IEEE 1901 power line networking and wireless Wi-Fi technology. FTTC is occasionally ambiguously called FTTP (fiber-to-the-pole), leading to confusion with the distinct fiber-to-the-premises system.