FTTH 2~6m 80g Stainless Steel Fiber Optic Drop Wire Clamp Tension Clamp
Description
Drop wire clamps, also called flat cable clamps, can be used with telephone drop wire cable, and optical fiber cable in FTTH, FTTX, and FTTB solutions. TUOLIMA's drop wire clamps are mostly used in telecommunication. The drop tension clamp is equipped with a perforated shim, which increases the tension load on the drop wire. The stainless steel wire bail allows installations of ODWAC drop wire clamps on the buildings, poles, strands with drive hooks, pole brackets, SS hooks, and other drop wire fittings and hardware. That can be supplied either separately or together as an assembly with FTTH-CLAMP.
Drop wire anchoring clamps and drop wire mounting fittings are available in TUOLIMA's product range. Optical fiber drop wire clamps are easy to pick up according to mechanical resistance and the diameter of the cable wire of the messenger.
All the assemblies passed the tensile tests, operation experience with temperatures ranging from - 60 °C up to +60 °C test, temperature cycling test, aging test, corrosion resistance test, etc.
Key Features
1. FTTH drop clamp S-Type designed for suspension or tension round or flat FTTH fiber optic cable or drop wire cable in FTTX construction or telephone drop wires. FTTH clamp S-Type is applied outdoor on routes with short spans up to 50mm.
2. FTTH drop clamp is very easy to install, and it does not require additional tools, handily adjusted metal S-hook allows simple installation on cross-arm or suspension brackets and FTTH hooks, as well.
3. FTTH plastic clamp S-Type has a plastic clip for round and flat cable sizes diameter 2.5-5mm or size 2*5mm, which covers most of the popular ranges of outdoor FTTH cables. The plastic clip provides excellent adherence with cable and ensures reliable fixation.
Application
These clamps will be used as cable dead-ends at end poles (using one clamp).Two clamps
can be installed as a double dead-end in the following cases :
• at jointing poles
• at intermediate angle poles when the cable route deviates by more than 20°.
• at intermediate poles when the two spans are different in lengths
• at intermediate poles on hilly landscapes