When cabling a network using fibre, what is the difference between single mode and multi-mode fibre? When would I be using one or the other? Are there compatibility and/or speed concerns with each?
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Main difference: Singlemode fiber has a lower power loss characteristic than multimode fiber, which means light can travel longer distances through it than it can through multimode fiber. Not surprising, the optics required to drive singlemode fiber are more expensive. When to use each: Both singlemode and modern multimode fiber can handle 10G speeds. The most important thing to consider is the distance requirement. Within a data center, it's typical to use multimode which can get you 300-400 meters. If you have very long runs or are connecting over longer distance, single mode can get you 10km, 40km, 80km, and even farther - you just need to use the appropriate optic for the distance required, and again, the prices go up accordingly. Compatibility issues: They are not compatible. You cannot mix multimode and singlemode fiber between two endpoints. The optics are not compatible either. There's a lot more to say about fiber, in general, but I hope this answers your immediate question. |
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Multi-mode fiber (MMF) uses a much bigger core and usually uses a longer wavelength of light. Because of this, the optics used in MMF have a higher capability to gather light from the laser. In practical terms, this means the optics are cheaper. Single-mode fiber (SMF) has much tighter tolerances for optics used. The core is smaller and the laser wavelength is narrower. This means that SMF has the capability for higher bandwidth and much longer distances in transmission. With 10GB just around the corner for many of my customers, I've started recommending they use SMF everywhere for connections. When installed as part of a project, the extra cost of SMF is negligible compared to MMF. That also means you won't need to rip out your MMF fiber plant to upgrade speeds in a few years. |
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Singlemode fiber has a smaller core (9 micron), resulting in less light diffraction over distance than multimode fiber (50, 62.5) micron. The fragility and increased cost to produce singlemode fiber makes it more expensive to use, which is why multimode is typically used when you don't need the distance of singlemode. Multimode generally has a reach upto ~550 meters, where as singlemode has the potential to reach 10,000 meters (40,000 meters with ER) |
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[MMF] longer wavelength (850nm), much wider beam vs. [SMF] short wavelength (1310nm-15??nm), narrow beam. The key difference that no one has touched is "modal dispersion", which is a fancy term to describe how the light moves through the fiber. This page goes into far more detail. The first picure sums it up... MM is bouncing off the edge of the fiber resulting in a dispersion of light at the far end because the photons that went down the center traveled less distance than those that bounced a lot; a 1ns pulse entering one end does not exit as a clean 1ns pulse at the other end. The effect is greatly diminished in SMF due to the much smaller diameter fiber, and precise injection ("launch") of the laser at the center of the fiber. Dispersion gets worse as distance increases. |
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Please read Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Optical Networking – But Were Afraid to Ask :) |
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The key difference between SMF and MMF? distance and cost Single Mode Fibre has a greater distance potential, and can support runs between 2 meters and 10,000 meters. However, the optics are twice the cost of MMF optics. One thing to consider with Multimode fiber is the grade of Fiber that is in place. I have spoken to many customers who laid OM1 fiber in the Mid-90's, and now want 10GbE runs over same fiber, and very frustrated to learn that this fiber will only support 10GbE out to 26m. Gigabit SX-LC Mini-GBIC provides a full-duplex Gigabit solution up to 550 meters over multimode fiber.
Gigabit LX-LC Mini-GBIC provides a full-duplex Gigabit solution up to 10 km over singlemode fiber, or up to 550 meters over multimode fiber.
10-GbE SFP+ Short Range supports the 10-Gb SR standard, providing 10-Gb connectivity up to 300 meters over multimode fiber.
10-GbE SFP+ Long Range supports the 10-Gb LR standard, providing 10-Gb connectivity up to 10 km over singlemode fiber. |
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Here's a few things not yet covered.
Of course on the long haul side there are DWDM systems now sending 16Tb through a single, single mode, fibre (in practice as we're always bi-directional that's a 16Tb pair), and by the time you need multiple links beyond a "campus" distance DWDM systems (for < 40kM fibre length CWDM might) make financial sense, with optical amps and dispersion management there are many multi-terabit submarine cable systems running purely optically regenerated for over 10,000kM. |
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You can reference cable spec for each module. This one is from Cisco SFP+ 10G spec and its support cabling. http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/modules/ps5455/data_sheet_c78-455693.html |
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I've successfully used MMF cable on a 1000Base LX/LH SFP, you need a mode conditioning patch cord. This was an ugly temp fix, once we got the correct SFP everything was back to normal. |
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