Fibre Optics: Advantages, Disadvantages and Applications in Telecommunications
Contents
Fibre optics has replaced copper as the reference technology for telecommunications. But what exactly are its advantages? And what are its limits? This article reviews fibre optic transmission — principles, real benefits, real drawbacks and applications — to help you understand why fibre has become essential.
What is fibre optic transmission?
A fibre optic communication system consists of three main components:
- An optical transmitter: converts the electrical signal into a light signal (LED or laser).
- A fibre optic cable: guides light over long distances thanks to total internal reflection. The glass core (9 µm in singlemode, 50 µm in multimode) is surrounded by an optical cladding and mechanical protection.
- An optical receiver: converts the light signal back into an electrical signal (photodiode).
Fibre carries data as light pulses, at the speed of light in glass (~200,000 km/s). It is this fundamental property that explains its exceptional performance compared to copper.
A single strand of singlemode fibre can carry terabits per second over tens of kilometres without amplification — a capacity impossible to achieve with copper.
The 7 advantages of fibre optics
1. Massive bandwidth
Fibre optics offers bandwidth far superior to copper. A singlemode cable easily supports 10 Gbps to 100 Gbps over kilometres. Even multimode fibre reaches 10 Gbps over 300 metres. CAT 6 copper tops out at 10 Gbps over only 55 metres.
2. Long-distance transmission
Singlemode fibre transmits a signal without amplification over 10 to 80 km depending on the optical module used. Copper is limited to 100 metres. For campus networks, inter-building links and FTTH, fibre is the only viable option.
3. Immunity to electromagnetic interference
Light suffers no electromagnetic interference (EMI). Unlike copper, fibre works perfectly next to electrical cables, motors, transformers and other sources of noise. This is a decisive advantage in industrial environments and technical risers.
4. Data security
Fibre optics is extremely difficult to intercept. Unlike copper, which emits a detectable electromagnetic field, fibre does not radiate. Any attempt at physical tapping causes immediately detectable signal loss. This is why fibre is preferred for government, military and financial networks.
5. Light weight and compactness
A 12-strand fibre cable weighs a few grams per metre, compared to several hundred grams for a copper cable of equivalent capacity. Fibre is also thinner, making it easier to run through conduits and reducing congestion in network cabinets.
6. Durability and resistance
Glass fibre does not corrode, does not oxidise and withstands temperature variations (-40°C to +85°C). Reinforced fibre cables (LSZH sheathing, armoured steel) handle the most demanding outdoor environments.
Elfcam fibre cables for every environment
- Indoor fibre cables — SC/APC patch cords, LC, patchcords
- Reinforced outdoor cables — armoured steel and LSZH sheath
- Fibre accessories — couplers, pigtails, splitters
7. Scalability (future-proof)
The fibre infrastructure laid today will support tomorrow's data rates. The same singlemode cable carrying 1 Gbps today can support 100 Gbps simply by changing the optical modules at the endpoints. It is a long-lasting investment, unlike copper, which requires recabling at every generation jump (CAT 5e → CAT 6 → CAT 7 → CAT 8).
The disadvantages to know
Higher initial cost
The fibre cable itself is affordable, but the active equipment (SFP modules, fibre switches, fusion splicers) and the specialised labour for installation and splicing raise the initial cost. However, this extra cost is offset by the longevity and superior capacity of fibre.
Fragility of glass (without protection)
Bare fibre is fragile — too tight a bend or crushing can break it. This is why fibre cables are protected by jackets (PVC, LSZH, armoured steel) and must respect a minimum bend radius. Modern G657A2 fibres tolerate much tighter bends than older generations.
Tip
Choose G657A2 fibre cables for home installations. This fibre supports a bend radius of 7.5 mm with no significant loss — ideal for tight runs and corners.
Specialised splicing
Connecting fibres requires a fusion splicer (electric arc). This is an expensive professional tool. For home installations, pre-terminated cables and couplers allow you to avoid splicing.
Splice-free solutions for home
- Fibre converters — integrated SFP, plug & play, pack of 2
- PTO kits + cable — pre-terminated fibre extension
- Home Fiber guide — complete splice-free home fibre network
Optical/electrical conversion
End devices (PC, TV, NAS) use Ethernet (RJ45). A converter or a switch with SFP ports is therefore needed to transition from fibre to Ethernet. It is an extra component, but it is also what makes the system modular and scalable.
Fibre optics vs copper: comparison table
| Criterion | Fibre optics | Copper (Ethernet) |
|---|---|---|
| Bandwidth | 10 Gbps – 100+ Gbps | 1 Gbps – 10 Gbps (CAT 6/8) |
| Max distance | 10–80 km (singlemode) | 100 m |
| EMI interference | Immune | Sensitive (shielding required) |
| Security | Very high (no radiation) | Medium (tappable) |
| Weight | Very light | Heavy (copper) |
| Durability | No corrosion, -40°C to +85°C | Possible corrosion |
| Cable cost | Comparable to CAT 7/8 | Cheaper (CAT 6) |
| Installation cost | Higher (splicing, modules) | Simpler (RJ45 crimping) |
| Scalability | Same cable → change modules | Recabling required |
| PoE | No (no current) | Yes (802.3af/at/bt) |
In practice
Most residential and professional installations use both: fibre for the long-distance backbone, and Ethernet for the last few metres to devices. This is exactly the Home Fiber approach from Elfcam.
Real-world applications of fibre optics
FTTH (Fiber to the Home)
Massive deployment of fibre to the home gives households access to speeds of 1 to 8 Gbps. In France, operators (Orange, Free, SFR, Bouygues) are actively rolling out FTTH. Elfcam supplies the optical termination outlets (PTO), PLC splitters and pigtails used in these installations.
Enterprise and campus networks
Inter-building singlemode fibre links replace older multi-pair copper cables. A 10G SFP+ switch at each end connected by an SC/APC fibre cable is enough for a high-performance backbone link.
Data centres
Rack-to-rack connections use multimode fibre (OM3/OM4) with 10G SFP+ modules for short-distance links (< 300 m). The high density and light weight of fibre are critical advantages in overcrowded cabinets.
Video surveillance and IoT
Remote IP cameras can be connected via fibre + PoE switch to combine the distance of fibre with PoE power. Fibre carries the signal over long distance, the PoE switch distributes locally.