Cable Construction & Types
Loose tube, tight buffer, ribbon, breakout, armored, and hybrid cable designs - when and where to use each type.
- Identify the structural components of a fiber optic cable including jacket, buffer, and strength members
- Compare loose tube, tight-buffered, ribbon, and breakout cable constructions
- Explain the purpose of armored, dielectric, and hybrid cable designs
- Describe cable fire ratings and water blocking methods
Leçon 1
Cable Anatomy - Jacket, Buffer, Strength Members & Color Codes
Fiber Optic Cable Structure
A fiber optic cable is much more than just glass fiber. It is an engineered assembly of protective layers designed to shield the delicate glass fiber from physical damage, moisture, and environmental stress. Understanding cable anatomy is essential for proper installation, termination, and troubleshooting.
Strength Members
Strength members are aramid yarn (Kevlar), FRP (fiber reinforced plastic), or steel elements that absorb pulling tension during installation. Without strength members, pulling force would transfer directly to the delicate glass fibers, causing breakage or increased attenuation.
Aramid yarn is the most common strength member in indoor cables. It surrounds the buffered fibers and is tied off at the connector or patch panel to transfer pulling force away from the glass.
Buffer Tubes
A buffer tube is a tube containing multiple fibers in loose tube cable. In loose tube construction, fibers sit inside gel-filled or dry-block tubes with room to move. In tight-buffered construction, each fiber is individually coated to 900 um.
Color Coding
Fibers within a cable are identified by standardized color codes. The TIA-598 standard defines the 12-fiber color sequence: blue, orange, green, brown, slate, white, red, black, yellow, violet, rose, aqua. Buffer tubes in loose tube cables follow the same color sequence.
Exam Tip - Strength Members
The exam asks what takes pulling tension in a fiber cable. The answer is aramid yarn, FRP, or steel strength members - not the jacket, gel, or copper ground.
Fiber cables consist of core/cladding, coating, buffer, strength members, and jacket. Strength members (aramid yarn/FRP/steel) absorb pulling tension to protect the glass fibers during installation.