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Home    Telekom Business: Sirocco Blown Fibre    Applications    Case Study - FTTH
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Case Study – FTTH

The principle of Fibre To The Home has long been recognised as the ultimate objective in enabling the provision of true triple play services to residential customers for many different types of telecom operators.

Triple play services (video, internet, and telephony) are seen as the primary method for capturing and maintaining residential customers for future revenue streams but until recently there have been capital expenditure barriers restricting the deployment of such optical networks, particularly for large operators. However, the recent cost reductions for active optical components and the innovation of new deployment technologies have now enabled many operators to ‘live the dream’ and deploy FTTH networks. The Scandinavian countries of Denmark, Norway and Sweden have been amongst the first to exploit these innovations and cost reductions, which have resulted in a major FTTH network roll-out across the region.

Sirocco has been a key enabler for these operators deploying FTTH networks. The flexibility and scalability of the system allows easier network design, installation, and configuration than conventional optical cable systems. In fact in some installations the whole FTTH network has been constructed with the use of Sirocco from the central office all the way to customer homes. In other examples the system has been combined with conventional optical cable networks to obtain maximum cost efficiencies, flexibility, and scalability.

Many municipalities and utilities have chosen to construct the physical layer of their network using a Point to Point fibre network which gives the ultimate optical solution with one or two fibres dedicated to each customer all the way from the central office.

Due to the hostile conditions during the winter months across the region it is common for the ducting and cable network to be constructed during the summer months. Customer connections can then be established at any time during the year by blowing the Sirocco fibre units into place from a variety of network locations. As a consequence fibre units have been blown in a wide range of climatic and weather conditions at all times of the year.

In rural regions it is common for blown fibre cables to be directly buried roadside, and customer connections completed with the use of branching units and single Direct Buried tube cables. Customers are then easily connected by blowing fibre units up to 1000m from distribution closure or cabinet or even in some cases directly from the central office. In this way, capital expenditure is minimised on day one and avoidance of unlit fibre in the network.Hundreds of thousands of kilometres of Sirocco bundle have been installed as customer connections.


Sirocco Features and Benefits 

 · Easy network construction/planning
 · Rapid customer connections
 · Minimises fibre splicing
 · Durable network
 · Network easily upgraded

Urban areas can be constructed in a similar manner but the frequent occurrence of Multi Dwelling Units (MDU’s) means that Sirocco can be used in a slightly different application. Here, traditional cable or Sirocco can be used to deploy fibre to the basement of MDU’s or street-side cabinets nearby and Sirocco tubing installed to each apartment within the MDU in a variety of configurations. Once again, Sirocco allows deployment of the fibre only when customers sign up for service and the fibre units can be blown in either from within the MDU or from outside the building. For both MDU and single dwelling units the use of pre-connectorised blown fibre units (connectors at one end of the fibre unit) is becoming increasingly common to achieve quicker customer connection.

Other network operators are now choosing to deploy a Passive Optical Network (PON) infrastructure to further reduce the network construction costs. In these types of network the signal sent down one optical fibre from the central office is split downstream in the network with the use of passive optical splitters. Typically the signal can be split up to 32 times but the ratio of the split depends on the distance between the customer and central office. Splitter devices are most commonly housed in either street-side cabinets (commonly referred to as fibre distribution hubs), or within closures which can be stored in underground chambers or hung from poles. There are a variety of PON topologies but broadly speaking they would be designed around Converged, Cascaded or Distributed PON architectures which are shown in the following pages of this catalogue. The Sirocco system contains a range of products which can be used within all of these network architectures.

Prysmian offers a portfolio of products that will support whichever network topology most suits the environment and strategy of each individual network operator. These products range from external to internal elements of the network, from the central office through to feeder and distribution elements of the network, and finally to the customer drop/connection. In addition, Prysmian continues to add new products and technologies to its FTTH portfolio as the market continues to expand.

Point to Point, Point to Multipoint
Converged PON
Cascaded PON
Distributed PON
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