Installation Instructions
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Chapter 1: Preface
- Chapter 2: New in this document
- Chapter 3: Safety and equipment care information
- Chapter 4: Supported transceiver, BOCs and DACs
- Chapter 5: Optical routing design
- Chapter 6: SFP
- Chapter 7: SFP+
- SFP+ transceivers
- SFP+ specifications
- SFP+ labels
- General SFP+ specifications
- Supported SFP+ transceivers
- 10GBASE-T SFP+ transceiver
- 10GBASE-LR/LW SFP+ specifications
- 10GBASE-LR/LW SFP+ high temperature (-5 °C to +85 °C) specifications
- 10GBASE-ER/EW SFP+ specifications
- 10GBASE-SR/SW SFP+ specifications
- 10GBASE-SR/SW SFP+ high temperature (0 °C to +85 °C) specifications
- 10GBASE-ZR/ZW SFP+ specifications
- 10GBASE-LRM SFP+ specifications
- 10GBASE-BX SFP+ specifications
- 10GBASE-CX specifications
- Chapter 8: QSFP+
- Chapter 9: QSFP28
- Chapter 10: End of sale transceivers and cables
- Chapter 11: Translations of safety messages
- Class A electromagnetic interference warning statement
- Electrostatic discharge warning statement
- Laser eye safety danger statement
- Laser eye safety connector inspection danger statement
- Connector cleaning safety danger statement
- Optical fiber damage warning statement
- Optical fiber connector damage warning statement
- SFP damage warning statement
- Glossary
Use the following precautions to avoid damaging the glass fiber:
• Do not kink, knot, or vigorously flex the cable.
• Do not bend the cable to less than a 40 mm radius.
• Do not stand on fiber optic cable; keep the cable off the floor.
• Do not pull fiber optic cable harder than you do a cable containing copper wire of comparable
size.
• Do not allow a static load of more than a few pounds on a section of the cable.
• Place protective caps on fiber optic connectors that are not in use.
• Store unused fiber optic patch cables in a cabinet, on a cable rack, or flat on a shelf.
Frequent overstressing of fiber optic cable causes progressive degeneration that leads to failure.
If you suspect damage to a fiber optic cable, either due to mishandling or an abnormally high error
rate observed in one direction, reverse the cable pairs. If the high error rate appears in the other
direction, replace the cable.
Warning:
Risk of equipment damage
Do not crush fiber optic cable. If fiber optic cable is in the same tray or duct with large, heavy
electrical cables, the weight of the electrical cable can damage the fiber optic cable.
Fiber optic connector care
Before you connect fiber optic connectors to transmission equipment, test equipment, patch panels,
or other connectors, ensure fiber optic connectors are clean. The performance of an optical fiber
connector depends on how clean the connector and coupling are at the time of connection.
A damaged or dirty connector can damage a connector with which it pairs. A connector must be
clean before you insert it into a transmitter or receiver.
Never clean an optical connector while it carries light. Optical power can cause ignition of the
cleaning material when it contacts the end of the optical connector and can destroy the connector.
Typical cleaning materials, for example, tissues saturated with alcohol, combust almost
instantaneously after you expose them to optical power levels of +15 dBm or higher.
Visually inspect the connector to determine cleanliness and to determine if it needs replacing. You
must replace a connector that has a scratch across the core, or a scratch that appears to end in the
core.
The proper connector cleaning method depends on the connector contaminants:
• Judge cleanliness by visual inspection with a fiber microscope. First inspect the connector, and
then clean as required.
Fiber optic connector care
May 2018 Installing Transceivers and Optical Components on VOSS 11










