Fiber Optic Cabling

Fiber, done right the first time.

Inside the building or between buildings. We pull it, terminate the ends, and hand you a PDF that proves the run actually performs to spec. Most fiber jobs go sideways at termination — we do that part ourselves, not subbed out.


When you need fiber instead of copper

Copper Ethernet tops out at about 100 yards. Fiber takes over when:

  • Two buildings need to talk to each other — across a parking lot to your warehouse, out to a remote office.
  • You’re in an electrically noisy space — manufacturing floors, big motors, industrial environments interfere with copper cable but don’t touch fiber.
  • Lightning is a concern. Copper between two buildings carries lightning surges from one to the other. Fiber doesn’t, because it’s glass, not metal.
  • A camera, gate, or sign sits at the far end of the property — past where copper can reach.
  • You need faster than 1 Gbps and 10-gig copper costs more than fiber for that run.

If the answer to “fiber or copper” isn’t obvious for your project, we’ll tell you. Plenty of jobs are right for copper — we’ll quote that instead.


What we do

  • Indoor runs — between equipment rooms inside a building.
  • Outdoor runs — between buildings on a campus, buried in conduit or run aerial.
  • Termination — finishing the ends. The part where most fiber jobs go sideways; done in-house, not subbed out.
  • Fusion splicing — joining two fibers permanently. We do it when a run is too long to ship in one piece, or when an existing fiber needs to be extended.
  • Certification testing — OTDR and insertion-loss results, delivered as a PDF. That document proves the run actually performs to spec. Most installers skip this. You find out three years later when something flakes.

Why fiber’s worth doing once

Fiber is the part of the network you don’t rip out and replace every five years like switches or WiFi. Done well, it’s the foundation for the next ten to fifteen years of upgrades inside the building. So we size the fiber count and the path with the rest of the network in mind — switches, WiFi, cameras, bridges — not just the bare minimum for one application today.


Talk to us

Tell us where the run starts, where it ends, and what you’re trying to carry. Photos or a rough sketch of the path help. We can usually quote a starting range before walking the site.

Request a consultation →  ·  [email protected]