Slashdot Mirror


Optical Fiber for a Small Community?

wildsurf asks: "I live in a small community of about 70 homes, which has been on a septic-tank system for many years, soon to be replaced with a sewer system. Not too exciting, except that this opens up the possibility of laying fiber-optic cable alongside the sewer lines, which could add significant value to the properties, as well as ultra-broadband. (It seems a shame to dig up all the trenches and NOT lay cable.) DSL doesn't work out here, and the cable provider is a bit sketchy, but there's an ultra-high-bandwidth pipe running nearby that we could possibly tap into. Anyway, I figure this would be the perfect audience to ask for recommendations, since I'm not quite sure how to approach this. The homeowner's meeting is next month, and I'd like to know what to suggest to them. Thanks in advance!" Well, if your local media company isn't going to wire your community, the community may just have to foot that bill itself. What would it need to do: what forms would they need to complete; what contractors would they need to hire (especially when piggy-backing on other municipal works); and most importantly, how much would something like this cost?

4 of 31 comments (clear)

  1. Re:No Need to Dig! by Strog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That will work great until the first plumber to rotoroot it turns your fiber lines to spaghetti. Of course when you say your internet when down the toilet, you will be mostly correct.

  2. advice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    lay a conduit with a piece of nylon thru it or some other strong wire. you call pull the fibre through AFTER they finish the sewer system so those sewer contractors dont break the fibre cable.
    note that you will have to get lots of permissions from lots of government entities which takes forever. good luck.
    for cost figures :
    The Town of Morrisburg (population 2000) is in the process of deploying a
    25km dark fiber network connecting all of their schools, hospitals,
    libraries and businesses. They are also building a carrier neutral hotel
    across the street from the local telephone company central office.

    The total cost - less than $CDN 250,000.

  3. Re:contacts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful


    For more technical details on the Morrisburg fiber build please contact Max
    Thomas of Prophet technologies, the company who is building and managing the
    fiber network for the town of Morrisburg - mjtoms@prophettech.com

    To learn why the town considers fiber networks critical to their future
    economic survival contact Roy Brister who chairs the town's
    telecommunications committee - insurance@bristergroup.com

    And to learn what other communities plans for dark fiber in Eastern Ontario
    please contact Birket Foster at birket@mbfoster.com

  4. But what about upstream connection? by Doco · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For costs - you could use these very rough numbers to guess what it will cost you.

    Start with around 40 cents per foot for your fiber. (my number on that might be a little old)

    What do you want to hook up? Ethernet over single mode fiber will cost a couple of hundred $ per end point. You want more than point-to-point Ethernet? Maybe doing voice, video, etc? Then you are talking significantly more.

    You do know that this almost has to be single mode fiber don't you? Single mode fiber is more expensive, and the connections to it are more expensive, but multi-mode fiber has too much dispersion to be usable beyond a couple of hundred meters.

    Then there are some installation costs. You may need to pay the city for the right to put the fiber in the trench with the sewer pipe.

    The big question is who is going to put up the money to buy the fiber, build a place for all the fiber to go to? How are you going to get a connection to the Net? Just because there is a fiber bundle running down the main road near you doesn't mean that it is that easy to tap into. The owner may not want to talk to you, the fiber may be running highly WDM traffic that makes it cost $100k+ just to install a add/drop multiplexer.

    Now - please don't get discouraged by this - I my current employer builds Fiber-To-The-Home equipment, so my livelyhood depends on things like this. It will however take a significant amount of effort to build something like this. It's not as easy as stringing some CAT5 in the dorms to make a floor network.