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Technical Information — Networking

Fibre vs. Copper: Benefits, Fibre Types and Where Each Wins

Optical fibre is the backbone of modern networks — higher bandwidth, longer reach and full immunity to electromagnetic interference. Copper holds its ground for short links, simple device connections and PoE. Here is the factual comparison.

Key Benefits of Optical Fibre

Higher bandwidth
10/40/100 Gbit/s and beyond — with single-mode practically unlimited (400G in the backbone).
Long reach
Single-mode spans many kilometres without repeaters; copper ends at around 100 m.
EMI immunity
Optical transmission is immune to electromagnetic fields — ideal in industrial settings.
Tap resistance
No radiating field; tapping requires major effort and causes measurable attenuation.
Weight & space
Thinner and lighter than copper of equal capacity — less tray occupancy.
Future-proof
Higher data rates often just need new transceivers — the installed fibre stays.

Construction of an Optical Fibre

Core Cladding Coating

A fibre consists of a light-guiding core, an optically thinner cladding (guides the light by total internal reflection) and a protective coating. The core diameter distinguishes single-mode (approx. 9 µm) from multimode (50/62.5 µm).

Construction of an optical fibre: core, cladding, coating

Fibre Types: Single-mode and Multimode

TypeCoreReach (10G)Typical use
OS2 (single-mode)~9 µm10 km+Backbone, campus, WAN, FTTx
OM3 (multimode)50 µm~300 mData centre, buildings (EMB 2000 MHz·km)
OM4 (multimode)50 µm~400 mData centre (EMB 4700 MHz·km)
OM5 (multimode)50 µm~400 mWideband (SWDM), modern DC cabling

Single-mode offers the highest bandwidth and reach; multimode is more economical on short links due to cheaper transceivers.

FTTx — How Far Does the Fibre Reach?

FTTCFibre to the Curb/Cabinet — fibre to the cabinet, last stretch via copper.
FTTBFibre to the Building — fibre into the building, risers may be copper.
FTTHFibre to the Home — fibre into the flat, maximum bandwidth.

When Copper Is Still the Right Choice

Copper (twisted pair) stays strong for the device connection: short links up to 100 m, inexpensive device ports and above all Power over Ethernet (PoE/PoE++) — a key argument for access points, IP cameras and VoIP phones. Modern categories such as Cat 6A (10G up to 100 m), Cat 7/7A and Cat 8 (25/40G at short DC range) keep copper relevant. Rule of thumb: fibre for backbone and distance, copper at the outlet.

Matching cabling in the B2B shop

From the fibre run to the patch cord — a wide range, pre-assembled on request.

» Fibre & components  ·  Fibre installation cable  ·  Fibre patch cords  ·  Data cables  ·  Fibre assembly

Advice: +49 (0)7666 / 88499-0  ·  sales@industry-electronics.com

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