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Most manufacturers will provide a spec sheet with the minimum bend radius for the particular type of fiber. Here are a few companies that have on-line spec sheets:
http://www.i-fiberoptics.com/fiber/IFOfiber.htm
http://www.ceramoptec.com/industrial.htm
http://www.corning.com/opticalfiber/products__applications/index.aspx
http://www.stockeryale.com/o/fiber/index.htm
http://www.specialtyphotonics.com/pdf/products/fibers/multimode/084_085.pdf

2007-02-14 05:27:16 · answer #1 · answered by DrewD 3 · 0 0

Fiber Optic can do any speed that you want to buy. I believe 2.56TB (terabytes) per second was achieved in 2002 so you can get (in relative to DSL terms) almost 3000GB/s (or 30,000MB/s) with modern Fiber-optic Communications. cost is well into the thousands per month, and unless you need to transfer about 2000 movies a second, or download 15 THOUSAND songs PER SECOND) fiber optic is too advanced lol if you really want PERSONAL highspeed - fork over the couple hundred a month for T1-Cable internet which has about 500mb/s and is very reliable.

2016-03-29 05:59:36 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Work for tyco and worked for Brand -rex. Original bend limits where based on available mandrels and expected conduit use. Now adays its based on various specs.
Suprise Suprise the specs used are usally from boards which have company member on. Most companies work that way if you have a novel product strength then apply for a new spec which uses this strength as a key spec then sell your product as the only one that meets this spec.

2007-02-14 03:00:17 · answer #3 · answered by Gib 3 · 0 0

It's more like the diameter of the cable that's gonna control how big the bend radius is..................

2007-02-14 00:33:28 · answer #4 · answered by mdlbldrmatt135 4 · 0 0

all of the stuff I use has a max 1.5" bend radius (3" dia).

2007-02-14 13:01:33 · answer #5 · answered by KB 2 · 0 0

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