AFL Telecommunications offers a high-quality line of loose tube cables for lashed aerial, duct and direct buried applications. Our loose tube designs include a wide range of optical fiber types - low attenuation, superior geometry single-mode fibers such as SMF-28e™ fiber; market-leading non-zero dispersion fibers including LEAF® fiber; and multimode fibers certified for laser launch and optimized for gigabit Ethernet applications. Our expert product engineering team can custom design your system with higher pulling tensions, special jacketing, or smaller diameters to fit your applications.
Non-Armored Loose Tube Cable, Single Jacket
Acting as the backbone for most of today’s fiber based systems, stranded fiber optic cables play a critical role in the high speed network. AFL’s Non-Armored Loose Tube fiber optic cables are designed to provide high fiber counts with the flexibility and versatility required for today’s most demanding installations.
Uniflex® Indoor/Outdoor Loose Tube Cable
Single tube products allow for installations that require a high degree of flexibility combined with a small cable diameter. AFL Telecommunications has designed a cable that has all the characteristics of stranded loose tube cables from a mechanical and environmental standpoint, combined with the high flexibility and small diameter requirements of real world installations.
Indoor/Outdoor Loose Tube Cable
Indoor/outdoor stranded loose tube combines the robust mechanical and environmental characteristics of an outside plant cable with the flexibility of an inside plant riser cable.
Uniflex® Non-Armored Loose Tube Cable
Indoor/outdoor stranded loose tube combines the robust mechanical and environmental characteristics of an outside plant cable with the flexibility of an inside plant riser cable. By installing indoor/outdoor stranded loose tube, costly splice locations entering into a building are avoided, being routed directly from the outside plant to telecommunications closets, or main distribution frames (MDF) through the riser of a building and eliminating the “50-foot rule.”