another one for you guys today, quick aerial drop and a little guide on how to install a Fibre Dmarc Box where a copper one once was. thanks for watching!
We don't have telecom masts like that in the US. We finally got fiber internet last year but only one provider. Mostly cable internet here in the US but finally fiber seems to be catching on here.
I wish something like this was available in my area for fiber. No issues with my coax provider Xfinity/Comcast, but just wish we had more options. I did notice a box similar to this on our house for dsl though so that would be nice to use if we get fiber in the future. I think the closest is a couple blocks from my house.
Yeah it’s rough. I come from a big city near Toronto and couldn’t get fibre to the home. But now I live in the mountains of bc and there’s fibre everywhere 😅😂
@@FyBurz same here I live in a suburb of Minneapolis and don't have fiber that close. Centurylink I believe is the only fiber around the area. I believe it though lol. Only thing I don't like about coax is 40mbps upload. I wish it was higher especially with working from home and moving thousands of files.
@@Todd.T Brampton. And just a few years ago. Bell allegedly had bell “fibe” which I signed up for but I saw them install it and it definitely wasn’t Fibre. This was before I was in the industry.
We have a new company called Tachus and they will not fiber the neighborhood, unless all the houses agree to use their service. Comcast still staling the money as the only option. My mother has 2 diffent fiber providers to choose from. She lives deep in the mountains in Puerto RIco.
@@FyBurz interesting just was curios im a fiber splicer for AT&T we use single node fiber strands for the most part vs heavy duty we usually use that for buried wire inside of conduit
Excellent craftsmanship and innovation. Nice work.
Thank you much appreciated 🙏🏼
So awesome seeing that copper getting gone!
Yeah haha I hate it
We don't have telecom masts like that in the US. We finally got fiber internet last year but only one provider. Mostly cable internet here in the US but finally fiber seems to be catching on here.
There’s lots of fibre around you just need to know where to look. Just not a lot of FTTH (fibre to the home)
Wow. Lead covered twisted pair. That's been there a while.
🤔
I wish something like this was available in my area for fiber. No issues with my coax provider Xfinity/Comcast, but just wish we had more options. I did notice a box similar to this on our house for dsl though so that would be nice to use if we get fiber in the future. I think the closest is a couple blocks from my house.
Yeah it’s rough. I come from a big city near Toronto and couldn’t get fibre to the home. But now I live in the mountains of bc and there’s fibre everywhere 😅😂
@@FyBurz same here I live in a suburb of Minneapolis and don't have fiber that close. Centurylink I believe is the only fiber around the area. I believe it though lol. Only thing I don't like about coax is 40mbps upload. I wish it was higher especially with working from home and moving thousands of files.
@@FyBurz Lots of things have changed then. What city and when did you leave?
@@Todd.T Brampton. And just a few years ago. Bell allegedly had bell “fibe” which I signed up for but I saw them install it and it definitely wasn’t Fibre. This was before I was in the industry.
We have a new company called Tachus and they will not fiber the neighborhood, unless all the houses agree to use their service. Comcast still staling the money as the only option. My mother has 2 diffent fiber providers to choose from. She lives deep in the mountains in Puerto RIco.
Your green portable workstation looks similar to mine!
Haha yeah it’s universal 😅
Why so many loops in the box? Is it a standard or just because you can and too much it better than too little?
It’s our protocol. And technically they want a lot more but I find a common ground usually around 3-4 arm spans.
Y’all use the heavy duty drop for every job?
Not sure it’s “heavy duty” 😅 but yes our standard is either 1F/2F Corning Flat drop
From dmarc into home we use 1F/2F Clearcurve much more flexible and “light duty” and fire rated
@@FyBurz interesting just was curios im a fiber splicer for AT&T we use single node fiber strands for the most part vs heavy duty we usually use that for buried wire inside of conduit
Why don't you usually show the fusion or the splicing part?
Because I don’t usually splice it. My drop order is just to leave the drop coiled there
Well noted
🤌🏽🤌🏽