
10 Safety and equipment care information
•Leave all components in their ESD-safe packaging until installation,
and use only a static-shielding bag for all storage, transport, and
handling.
•Clear the area of synthetic materials such as polyester, plastic, vinyl, or
styrofoam because these materials carry static electricity that damages
the equipment.
Care of fiber optic equipment
You must keep fiber optic equipment connections clean and damage-free.
Use the information in this section to properly maintain and care for fiber
optic equipment.
Care of fiber optic equipment navigation
•“Fiber optic cable care” (page 10)
•“Fiber optic connector care” (page 11)
•“Cleaning single connectors” (page 12)
•“Cleaning duplex connectors” (page 13)
•“Cleaning receptacles” (page 14)
Fiber optic cable care
Although the glass fiber in fiber optic cable is protected with reinforcing
material and plastic insulation, it is subject to damage. Use the following
precautions to avoid damaging the glass fiber.
•Do not kink, knot, or vigorously flex the cable.
•Do not bend the cable to less than a 40 mm radius.
•Do not stand on fiber optic cable; keep the cable off the floor.
•Do not pull fiber optic cable harder than you do a cable containing
copper wire of comparable size.
•Do not allow a static load of more than a few pounds on a section of
the cable.
•Place protective caps on fiber optic connectors that are not in use.
•Store unused fiber optic patch cables in a cabinet, on a cable rack, or
flat on a shelf.
Frequent overstressing of fiber optic cable causes progressive
degeneration that leads to failure.
Nortel Secure Router 2330/4134
Installation — SFPs
NN47263-303 03.01 7 September 2009
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