I would have to look into it and see if there’s any dark fibre I can get access to close by to keep costs downC but burying it would probably be the safer option. Fibre is expensive to fix if a farmer clipped my line with an implement, that kinda thing does happen out here.
Yes, it will be a problem if somebody will damage it with some heavy machine.
Try to plan a safe path, or bury it only in places where it could be damaged. If you have a river or brook, you could just drown fiber in it.
Really there is some cheap repair kits on market, and it could even work if you just align and fix two fibers ends in the way they will light into each other (did it once with toothpick and isolation tape :) ), but it is much better to weld it.
If you have electric poles to your farm and know electrician who is responsible for your area, try to talk with him. Pole mounts is cheap and you don't need them on every pole since fiber is lightweight and strong, if you make an agreement with electrician on putting fibre on his poles, it could be a good variant.
Having it strung on poles seems dangerous during winter though. Ice build up is enough to snap the electric lines, how could I be sure the glass fibre line would be up to the task? Besides running it in an expensive metal sheath or tying it to a steel wire of its own? Plus the poles are owned by the provincial government owned Manitoba Hydro so not as easy to get permission to piggy back on their poles...
We build too long thread here, site engine does not allow me to answer in the correct place so I answer here.
how could I be sure the glass fibre line would be up to the task?
There are mainly two versions of reinforcement type in fiber - it will be steel rope or fiberglass strings. Fibers itself runs in the center of enforcement in a small plastic tube filled with gluey goo. On the outside fiber have thick polyethylene insulation. There is a small list of substances that could stick to polyethylene and ice is not a one of them. Diameter of 4 fiber cable is 4-6mm. Hardly a lot of ice could build up on such cable. I don't know cases when the fiber was broken with ice, it was always fallen tree or a humans driving some construction machines.
Plus the poles are owned by the provincial government owned Manitoba Hydro so not as easy to get permission to piggy back on their poles...
Talk with the people who really handle your line. May be your line is too far from province goverment. :)
In any case, more information you collect, more sensible solution you will get.
I would have to look into it and see if there’s any dark fibre I can get access to close by to keep costs downC but burying it would probably be the safer option. Fibre is expensive to fix if a farmer clipped my line with an implement, that kinda thing does happen out here.
Yes, it will be a problem if somebody will damage it with some heavy machine.
Try to plan a safe path, or bury it only in places where it could be damaged. If you have a river or brook, you could just drown fiber in it.
Really there is some cheap repair kits on market, and it could even work if you just align and fix two fibers ends in the way they will light into each other (did it once with toothpick and isolation tape :) ), but it is much better to weld it.
If you have electric poles to your farm and know electrician who is responsible for your area, try to talk with him. Pole mounts is cheap and you don't need them on every pole since fiber is lightweight and strong, if you make an agreement with electrician on putting fibre on his poles, it could be a good variant.
Having it strung on poles seems dangerous during winter though. Ice build up is enough to snap the electric lines, how could I be sure the glass fibre line would be up to the task? Besides running it in an expensive metal sheath or tying it to a steel wire of its own? Plus the poles are owned by the provincial government owned Manitoba Hydro so not as easy to get permission to piggy back on their poles...
We build too long thread here, site engine does not allow me to answer in the correct place so I answer here.
There are mainly two versions of reinforcement type in fiber - it will be steel rope or fiberglass strings. Fibers itself runs in the center of enforcement in a small plastic tube filled with gluey goo. On the outside fiber have thick polyethylene insulation. There is a small list of substances that could stick to polyethylene and ice is not a one of them. Diameter of 4 fiber cable is 4-6mm. Hardly a lot of ice could build up on such cable. I don't know cases when the fiber was broken with ice, it was always fallen tree or a humans driving some construction machines.
Talk with the people who really handle your line. May be your line is too far from province goverment. :)
In any case, more information you collect, more sensible solution you will get.
Very true, thanks for all the great info!