Fiber Optic Center to focus on fiber cleaving at OFC 2017

March 16, 2017
Distributor Fiber Optic Center, Inc. (FOC) will unveil the FOC Cleaving Station in Booth 3309 at OFC 2017 in Los Angeles March 21-23. The station will provide a platform from which FOC will demonstrate three cleaving systems -- the Phenix Fibersect Mechanical Connector Cleaver, the Cometx Laser Cleaving System, and the OptiSaber MT Laser Cleaver.

Distributor Fiber Optic Center, Inc. (FOC) will unveil the FOC Cleaving Station in Booth 3309 at OFC 2017 in Los Angeles March 21-23. The station will provide a platform from which FOC will demonstrate three cleaving systems -- the Phenix Fibersect Mechanical Connector Cleaver, the Cometx Laser Cleaving System, and the OptiSaber MT Laser Cleaver.

The Phenix Fibersect Mechanical Connector Cleaver, from Phenix Fiber Optics, features a small size and battery power for portability on the production floor. It cuts the epoxy and fibers protruding from the face of connector ferrules, including MTs. First Pass Yield and throughput are improved by minimizing polishing and eliminating the manual cleaving and denubbing steps.

The Cometx line, from Sagitta Engineering Solutions Ltd., enables efficient and quick laser cleaving of fibers during the connector termination process. The four versions include:

  1. Cometx-Si, for laser cleaving of single fiber connectors prior to polishing
  2. Cometx-Mt, for laser cleaving of multiple and/or single fiber connectors prior to polishing
  3. Cometx-Ssp, for laser cleaving of multiple and/or single fiber connectors prior to polishing to be terminated by Single Step Polishing
  4. Cometx-Bf, for laser cleaving of multiple and/or single fiber in bare fiber applications (for non-physical contact connectors)

Finally, Domaille Engineering's OptiSaber MT Laser Cleaver is a fiber forming machine that increases production yield in multi-fiber (MTP/MPO) applications and reduces process variation associated with the cracking typical of mechanical cleaving methods.

Overall, FOC says it will emphasize end-face quality reworks, core cracks, chip outs elimination, increasing production yield on multi-fiber (MTP/MPO) applications, portability on the production floor, minimizing polishing, eliminating manual cleaving, and denubbing steps.

For related articles, visit the Optical Technologies Topic Center.

For more information on fiber accessories and suppliers, visit the Lightwave Buyer's Guide.

Sponsored Recommendations

Scaling Moore’s Law and The Role of Integrated Photonics

April 8, 2024
Intel presents its perspective on how photonic integration can enable similar performance scaling as Moore’s Law for package I/O with higher data throughput and lower energy consumption...

Coherent Routing and Optical Transport – Getting Under the Covers

April 11, 2024
Join us as we delve into the symbiotic relationship between IPoDWDM and cutting-edge optical transport innovations, revolutionizing the landscape of data transmission.

Moving to 800G & Beyond

Jan. 27, 2023
Service provider and hyperscale data center network operators are beginning to deploy 800G transmission capabilities – but are using different technologies to do so. The higher...

Supporting 5G with Fiber

April 12, 2023
Network operators continue their 5G coverage expansion – which means they also continue to roll out fiber to support such initiatives. The articles in this Lightwave On ...