August 23, 2007 -- The Light Brigade has introduced its latest fiber-optic training course, titled "Fiber Characterization: PMD, CD, and ORL."
The company says the three-day course not only provides the classroom instruction necessary to understand the theory and principles of fiber characterization, but also includes hands-on instruction on fiber-optic splicing, connector inspection and cleaning, span testing and documentation.
According to the company, the course's premise is as follows:
Over the past twenty years, fiber-optic cables have come to handle exponentially increasing bandwidth demands. As network speeds increase, optical dispersion compensation becomes more critical for maintaining high signal quality and low bit error rates. Transmission equipment manufacturers often will not guarantee the performance of their systems unless polarization mode dispersion (PMD), chromatic dispersion (CD), and optical return loss (ORL) tests have been documented. These vital tests require an understanding of the importance of optical cleanliness of the optical connections as well as how to properly perform reflection measurements using an optical time-domain reflectometer (OTDR).
Day one of the course includes classroom review of basic optical theory, standards, transmission basics, fiber types, connectors, test equipment, installation, systems, and the theory and principles of dispersion. Day two specifically focuses on OTDRs, detailing the types available and how they function, as well as give practical experience with OTDR calibration and setup, loss measurement, and the proper use of deadzone boxes and terminators for reflectance measurement.
During day three, attendees will build an 80-km span using G.655 fiber (at 1,550 nm), and a 50-km span using G.652 fiber (at 1,310 nm). After testing and documenting these spans for PMD and CD, the attendees will insert dispersion-compensating modules into each span and then re-test for the new dispersion values.
For more information, go to www.lightbrigade.com.