▲ | ttul 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Even the best optical fiber transceivers and glass are limited (practically) to about 100km; repeaters are typically placed every 60-70km. The technology for delivering power to the repeaters is fascinating. They inject 5,000-10,000VDC at one end and each repeater shunts off a tiny amount of current to power the amplifier. All of this is embedded in the cable itself before being loaded onto the cable ship. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | topspin 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
The history behind TAT-1, the first transatlantic telephone cable, and the repeaters used, is fascinating. Bell Labs designed the repeaters. The repeaters used vacuum tubes for amplification and were designed for extreme reliability. The flexible repeaters were integrated into the cable like modern cables. The tubes were tested to an extremely high standard. Only a small fraction of the manufactured tubes were selected after testing: Bell Labs designed a test regime over 18 years to detect minute flaws in manufactured tubes The cable and its 306 tubes operated for 22 years with no failures. | |||||||||||||||||
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