For this purpose, bidirectional optical splitters are used, and the number of splits mostly depends on the distance to the subscriber and the PON standard. Fibers are typically split into 32, 64, or 128. Fiber to the Room (FTTR) is a possible solution to issues with indoor connectivity. Demands for high bandwidth, high bit rates in both directions, low latency, and service reliability are constantly growing. Applications such as online learning, remote work, online gaming, video conferencing, live. Why is FTTR developing rapidly? world and more than 90% in China. gigabit coverage in the whole house. More. Whether you're deploying a Passive Optical Network (PON), connecting MDUs, or expanding fiber access in rural zones, the right splitter configuration can dramatically affect performance, layout simplicity, and project cost. FTTR turns FTTH into a full-fiber backbone inside the building, room by room. A key challenge is determining how many users a single OLT port can support, which is defined by the split ratio. Unlike active devices (which require power), splitters operate without electricity, relying solely on the physics of.
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