Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 26 | Page 23

LATEST INTELLIGENCE THE FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN OM5 AND OM4+ FIBRE P ressure continues to build for data centre operators to migrate to faster applications and longer link distances. In response, infrastructure OEMs and industry standards bodies are working overtime, developing the necessary link components and performance guidelines. Typically, the introduction of a new technology involves engineering and testing, which leads to initial market interest and standards development. Having standards in place prior to wide-scale deployment is preferred as it ensures aspects such as performance specifications and application support are clearly articulated using industry- accepted standards - but this is not always the case. In 2016, the industry recognised and standardised wideband OM5 multimode fibre (MMF) and is now deploying it to enable improved support for applications involving multiple wavelengths. Some, however, now claim that proprietary variations of OM4 (so-called OM4+) are roughly equivalent to OM5 in supporting technologies like BiDi and SWDM4. They argue that OM4+ can support existing 850 nm applications over longer distances than OM4 or OM5. These assertions are based on a purportedly higher calculated effective modal bandwidth (EMBc) or the purported effects of chromatic dispersion compensation. n Download whitepapers free from www.intelligentcio.com/me/whitepapers/ www.intelligentcio.com INTELLIGENTCIO 23