🚀 Elevate Your Connectivity Game!
The 100 Meters Uniboot LC to LC Outdoor Armored Fiber Patch Cable is a high-performance, low-friction duplex fiber optic cable designed for both indoor and outdoor use. Featuring a durable armored design, quick polarity switching, and space-saving uniboot connectors, this cable is perfect for high-density cabling applications and ensures reliable connectivity across various network setups.
J**Y
It works.
I pulled this in a very difficult wire pull. So it stood up to more tension than ever suggested for fiber. It's been installed for over a 2 years. It's worked great so far.
S**.
This cable is nothing short of amazing. Great quality
I'm super pleased with this cable. I installed it on a property with a lot of rainforest. I pulled it thru a lot of conduits and PVC hose which I then buried next to my water and power lines to connect multiple houses. In combination with some (cheap) Gigabit LC to Ethernet Media Converters. I thought for sure during the pulling of this cable it would get damaged. But it survived and is working perfectly, saving me a LOT of money. I'll certainly be buying more of this cable in the future.
J**E
High Quality and Great Price
I got 500 feet of this fiber cable and it works flawlessly. I use a pair of TP-Link SPF's to terminate it and I get full end-to-end gigabit service. This is to run from my home to an adjacent building. As the water line is run from the house to the new building, I will drop this and an RG-6 cable into the same trench before closing it up. I am confident that there will be no issue with direct-burial under these conditions.11/07/2023 I wanted to amend this review now that I have installed this fiber. I buried it as mention above and it held up even when the trench was filled in. I have terminated it in the new building and tested again today. Even after abuse the fiber received (kinks, curling, etc.) as it was installed, it still works error-free with full speed. I highly recommend this fiberoptic cable.
H**H
It works and it is smooth to pull
[Original 10/28/2024] Today is Monday, it's been installed since the afternoon of Saturday, and was an instant upgrade. Google home responds noticeably faster to turn lights on and off, play music, ect, which is surprising since technically optics add more latency than ethernet or wifi. I'm guessing there was a lot of lost packets on the ethernet cable and wifi over the 400ish feet.As others have said, the only downside of having a pre-attached pulling eye is that you cannot test the cable before pulling it. But I'm pleased to say I had no issue! This is my first successful fiber run.I used Mikrotik switches and 6Com SFP+ transceivers (10GBase-LR: 10km) and it was all plug and play.The description says this cable is "low friction" and it was really easy to pull. I had tried before with the non-armoured cable "FLYPROFiber LC to LC OS2 150M, Single Mode Duplex" and it was really hard to pull and broke. This time I did a better job pulling, so it's not all the fault of the cable. But the first time I used wire lube and this time I did not. It was a year later, so I don't know if the lube was helping or not. I could feel this cable sliding through my hands as we pulled it, and it really is low friction as long as your hands/arms are not wet (sweaty). At no point did we have to apply any serious pressure, really nice!As a result of "doing a better job pulling" I have about 1 foot of this direct buried, I'll update if it ever stops working.
M**P
Working great so far
I bought this cable to replace a 100 foot, outdoor, aerial copper Ethernet cable between two buildings. The problem with the copper line was lightning strikes in the area sometimes charged the copper Ethernet wires and blew out my networking equipment. This would happen to me every 3 or 4 years. That got expensive. Since fiber is now cheap enough to run as a homeowner, I took the opportunity to replace the copper so I can relax during lightning storms.This cable needs a carrier wire to suspend it so as not to damage the fiber line itself. I already had that installed, as I was merely replacing the copper Cat6 line with a fiber line. To suspend this fiber cable, I wrapped it around my suspension cable every foot or so. I did find that the loops of the fiber line around my suspension cable tended to bunch up -- either the coating on this fiber line is "slippery" or the suspension cable is slippery, or both. Either way, I had to find a way to keep the fiber line from sliding down my suspension cable, so I used a bunch of smaller wires to physically wrap around both the fiber line and my carrier line to fix the two cables together every 10 feet or so.I bought this specific cable to match the media converters used to convert from electrical to optical on one end and then back to electrical signal on the other end. The description for the media converts I used was: "A Pair of Gigabit Single-Mode LC Fiber to Ethernet Media Converter (SFP LX Modules Included),1.25G Fiber Media Converter, 1000Base-LX to 10/100/1000Base-TX, 1310nm, SMF, Transmission up to 20-KM" You can read my review of those converters to see my experience with them.
H**O
Very nice easy install.
Ran fiber from my home to my shop. I have many security cams, that I thought was bottle necking on the cat5. Definately did the trick. Nice to have 400mb speeds in the shop.
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