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Repair Crews Reach Vicinity of Damaged Cables In Mediterranean

GWMAW writes "A robotic submarine searched beneath the Mediterranean on Sunday for damaged communications cables, two days after Web and telephone access was knocked out for much of the Middle East. Telecommunication providers from Cairo to Dubai continued Sunday to scramble to reroute voice and data traffic through potentially costly detours in Asia and North America after the lines running under the Mediterranean Sea were damaged Friday." According to the article, "Once found, the cable ends will be pulled to the surface and repaired on deck — a process that could take several days."

27 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Maybe this time ... by pipboy9999 · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... they will find Gilligan's Island and rescue the castaways.

    And then whom ever owns the copy right to Gilligan's Island will misread the headline and sue them for using the under sea cable to download episodes of Gilligan's Island

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    Yeah, I've got nothing...
  2. Dang! I was getting SUCH a good deal by HawkinsD · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dang it! I was getting SUCH a good deal from the colocation facility in Yemen.

    --
    Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by mere idiocy.
  3. Wow by papasui · · Score: 4, Funny

    Stop pissing off Andrew Ryan.

  4. How do they do it? by tsa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How do they repair the cables? Especially with glass fibre I wouldn't know what to do.

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    -- Cheers!

    1. Re:How do they do it? by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Funny

      > How do they repair the cables?

      Superglue and duct tape.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    2. Re:How do they do it? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Funny

      this is for UNDER WATER use.

      therefore, its better left to DUCK tape.

      (sorry....)

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      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re:How do they do it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't worry, you don't have to do a thing. They already have people who do know what to do.

    4. Re:How do they do it? by pipboy9999 · · Score: 5, Informative

      How do they repair the cables? Especially with glass fibre I wouldn't know what to do.

      My assumption would be that there are points built into the cable where you can exchange out bad segments for new segments.

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      Yeah, I've got nothing...
    5. Re:How do they do it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      http://www.laser2000.co.uk/fusion_splicers.php?area=262

    6. Re:How do they do it? by au3276f8ads7bfsad76s · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Better yet, how do they find where it's broken? I'm assuming you can't just 'ping' the broken end and get a distance measurement...

    7. Re:How do they do it? by AngelCeleste · · Score: 4, Informative

      fiber splicers - its mostly done in the field because in house we have handy-dandy prespliced fiber cables of different lengths. If you see (fill in local ILEC) out repairing a cut cable, chances are they might be splicing.

    8. Re:How do they do it? by onkelonkel · · Score: 5, Informative
      You had it right. OTDR.

      Optical Time Domain Reflectometer. You just ping the broken end and get a distance measurement.

      --
      None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
    9. Re:How do they do it? by Octorian · · Score: 4, Informative

      With a device known as an Optical Time Domain Reflectometer. Supposedly they can not only detect cable length, breaks, but even the location of splices.

    10. Re:How do they do it? by rickb928 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The actual fiber repair is done pretty much as it would be done for terrestrial cables. Either a fusion splice, usually by re-cleaving the ends for a clean surface and vibrating the ends ultrasonically to heat by friction and weld them together, or a very small splicing kit that holds the ends in near-perfect alignment, usually filled with a gel of identical optical properties to reduce the loss and refraction. Since space is an issue, I suspect fusion splices are the only acceptable option.

      The biggest problem is both accomodating the repairs to the fiber jackets, and then re-sealing the cable. I wouldn't be suprised that there are fairly standard splice boxes that solve this.

      Replacing segments doesn't seem like a good option. Any useful segment should measure miles in length, which is pretty expensive. Even replacing a segment and hauling the old one in for repair sounds like more trouble than it's worth. Of course, repairs on the open sea sound like fun to me. I had enough trouble sitting at a little worktable in a dim cable room with equipment balanced here and there, and testing going on constantly. A nice 20-30 foot sea would make me want to apply at the local McDonald's. Life is too short.

      But nice work if you can do it.

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      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    11. Re:How do they do it? by MBGMorden · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    12. Re:How do they do it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      How do they repair the cables? Especially with glass fibre I wouldn't know what to do.

      They drag the cable up and cut it (assuming it is not already in two pieces). They strip back the armor and sheath on both pieces. They then splice in a new piece of cable using a fusion splicer, which basically lines up each individual fiber (quite a time-consuming process to clean and prep each piece) and then the fusion splicer essentially melts the fiber strand back together. They put heat-shrink and something like a splint to keep it from bending over the spliced area and then fit each splice into a tray. The trays are then mounted into a splice case. Submarine cables are much more difficult because it has to be well sealed and able to withstand significant pressure.

      The faults are located using an OTDR (Optical Time Delay Reflectometry), which basically sends light down the fiber and measures the reflections. As we know the speed of light we can accurately measure the distance to a break, imperfections, etc of the cable and splices.

    13. Re:How do they do it? by aphexer · · Score: 3, Informative

      They cut the cable in half, and put a new piece in it. They can locate the exact point of failure using an OTDR, as already mentioned in other comments by now.

      In one such big under-sea cable, there could be hundreds of individual fibers inside. (It doesn't cost alot more to put another fibre in the big cable, and you get alot more bandwidth to sell).

      For each fiber inside the cable they "weld" it to the new piece they are putting between. (I'm sorry, I don't have the correct translation for the word in English). But really, they put the fiber in a machine, together with the fiber of the new cable they are putting in between, and they hit a button: "weld". It creates an arc through the point where the fiber needs to be welded together. After the arcing you heat that spot so the atomic structure can repair a little.

      Repeat 500 times and put some extra mechanical protection around to protect your welding, and you're done.

      There exists equipment that can do multiple fibers at once, so basically the engineer who's doing it just needs to place both ends of the fibers in the machine, hit the button, remove fiber and repeat for a day or 2.

    14. Re:How do they do it? by joeslugg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm wondering about the "pulled to the surface and repaired on deck" part.

      I imagine a cable laying on the sea floor going more or less "straight"
      from A to B. Is there enough slack in the line to bring the broken
      ends to the surface and hold them together?

      (Clearly, the answer must be 'yes'. But I'm just wondering if anyone knows
      more about it. Do they intentionally leave in some slack just for such a
      reason when they lay a cable like this?)

    15. Re:How do they do it? by tabrisnet · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, there are repeaters in line, albeit I don't remember the distances. There's a big copper conductor in the jacket (just one, the ground is the ocean itself) sending a couple hundred volts through it.

    16. Re:How do they do it? by lucifuge31337 · · Score: 3, Informative

      how do you propose to power it?

      I'm not saying power couldn't be supplied, but I don't think it'd be cost effective, and you'd need to run a whole new set of lines.

      The same way the repeaters are already powered - the are power leads bundled with the fiber cable. In a full cut, they would have to repair the copper power leads anyway.

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      Do not fold, spindle or mutilate.
    17. Re:How do they do it? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 4, Funny

      Surely not! We all know here that ducks float.

      Only if they weigh the same as a witch!

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    18. Re:How do they do it? by SETY · · Score: 3, Informative

      Fusion splices are the only acceptable option because you can't afford to have a 0.1 dB splice on a long fiber. Too much loss will upset your whole link budget and you will not get an acceptable SNR at the far end.

      BTW, I have never read how a fusion splicer works, but all the ones I have used align the fiber and look like they send a current between two metal contacts for ~0.2 seconds that fuse the fiber. I'm pretty sure ultrasound isn't used. When you are trying to align two fibers exactly, vibrating them doesn't sound like a good idea.

    19. Re:How do they do it? by IonOtter · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But nice work if you can do it.

      No it's not.

      I dunno how things work on cable ships for other countries, but working on the USNS Zeus sucks bigtime.

      No internet, no phones, no email, not even any outgoing traffic. NO electronic emissions of any kind. That also includes satellite TV because the dish does emanate some EMF. The only thing you can get is US Navy fleet broadcast coming in on UHF or EHF. You're gone for 3-4 months at a time, nobody onboard except for the captain knows where you're going or when you'll be back.

      The Zeus would drive a Tibetan Hermit insane.

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      [End Of Line]
  5. Re:Satellites FTW? by karmatic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yet another reason why we need a better satellite infrastructure. If everyone were using satellites, a reroute through Asia would be unnecessary.

    Except for the whole "240ms minimum latency" thing. Also, it's a lot easier to fix a malfunctioning cable than a malfunctioning satellite. Also, bad weather over the Satellite NOC can take out everyone's connection.

  6. Re: Slack by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 5, Informative

    There was a terrific article written for Wired by Neal Stephenson (yes, that Neal Stephenson!) called Mother Earth Mother Board all about the laying of the longest underwater telephony cable in history. He goes into a lot of details as to how the cable is laid, what happens to the cable when it reaches shore, what is the cable made of, how does it work, etc.

    Here's an excerpt where he explains how slack affects the process:

    The basic problem of slack is akin to a famous question underlying the mathematical field of fractals: How long is the coastline of Great Britain? If I take a wall map of the isle and measure it with a ruler and multiply by the map's scale, I'll get one figure. If I do the same thing using a set of large-scale ordnance survey maps, I'll get a much higher figure because those maps will show zigs and zags in the coastline that are polished to straight lines on the wall map. But if I went all the way around the coast with a tape measure, I'd pick up even smaller variations and get an even larger number. If I did it with calipers, the number would be larger still. This process can be repeated more or less indefinitely, and so it is impossible to answer the original question straightforwardly. The length of the coastline of Great Britain must be defined in terms of fractal geometry.

    A cross-section of the seafloor has the same property. The route between the landing station at Songkhla, Thailand, and the one at Lan Tao Island, Hong Kong, might have a certain length when measured on a map, say 2,500 kilometers. But if you attach a 2,500-kilometer cable to Songkhla and, wearing a diving suit, begin manually unrolling it across the seafloor, you will run out of cable before you reach the public beach at Tong Fuk. The reason is that the cable follows the bumpy topography of the seafloor, which ends up being a longer distance than it would be if the seafloor were mirror-flat.

    Over long (intercontinental) distances, the difference averages out to about 1 percent, so you might need a 2,525-kilometer cable to go from Songkhla to Lan Tao. The extra 1 percent is slack, in the sense that if you grabbed the ends and pulled the cable infinitely tight (bar tight, as they say in the business), it would theoretically straighten out and you would have an extra 25 kilometers. This slack is ideally molded into the contour of the seafloor as tightly as a shadow, running straight and true along the surveyed course. As little slack as possible is employed, partly because cable costs a lot of money (for the FLAG cable, $16,000 to $28,000 per kilometer, depending on the amount of armoring) and partly because loose coils are just asking for trouble from trawlers and other hazards. In fact, there is so little slack (in the layperson's sense of the word) in a well-laid cable that it cannot be grappled and hauled to the surface without snapping it.

    This raises two questions, one simple and one nauseatingly difficult and complex. First, how does one repair a cable if it's too tight to haul up?

    The answer is that it must first be pulled slightly off the seafloor by a detrenching grapnel, which is a device, meant to be towed behind a ship, that rolls across the bottom of the ocean on two fat tractor tires. Centered between those tires is a stout, wicked-looking, C-shaped hook, curving forward at the bottom like a stinger. It carves its way through the muck and eventually gets under the cable and lifts it up and holds it steady just above the seafloor. At this point its tow rope is released and buoyed off.

    The ship now deploys another towed device called a cutter, which, seen from above, is shaped like a manta ray. On the top and bottom surfaces it carries V-shaped blades. As the ship makes another pass over the detrenching grapnel, one of these blades catches the cable and severs it.

    It is now possible to get hold of the cut ends, using other grapnels. A cable repair ship carries many d

  7. cables and eavesdropping by BigHungryJoe · · Score: 3, Funny

    I've got sources inside US intel that tell me these are botched attempts by Syrian intelligence to tap these undersea lines.

    The chair is against the wall.

    John has a long mustache. That is all.

  8. Re:Gilligan Saved the Cable! by Wansu · · Score: 4, Funny

      Gilligan didn't cut the cable, ...

    He gingerly buried it in Marianne's trench.

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    Wansu, th' chinese sailor