Link Testing, Loss Budgets & Certification
Reference methods, loss budget calculations, fiber attenuation values, mandrel wraps, and link acceptance criteria.
- Compare 1-jumper and 3-jumper reference methods for loss testing
- Calculate a loss budget for a fiber link with connectors, splices, and fiber
- State standard fiber attenuation values at key wavelengths
- Explain mandrel wraps and modal conditioning for multimode testing
- Describe link acceptance criteria and test documentation requirements
Lesson 1
1-Jumper vs 3-Jumper Reference Methods
Why Reference Methods Matter
Before measuring link loss, the test equipment (power meter + light source) must be referenced - a zero-loss baseline is established by connecting the test jumpers directly together. The reference method determines how many connectors in the link are included in the measurement.
1-Jumper Reference
The 1-jumper reference (also called Method B or single reference) uses one test jumper connected between the light source and power meter to set the reference. This method includes all connectors in the link in the loss measurement, making it the most comprehensive method.
3-Jumper Reference
The 3-jumper reference (also called Method A or triple reference) uses three test jumpers - one from the light source, one between the two, and one to the power meter. The reference includes the loss of the two middle connections. When testing the link, these jumpers connect to the link's first and last connectors.
The 3-jumper method excludes the two end connectors of the link from the measurement. This gives a lower measured loss value and is appropriate when the end connectors are mated to equipment.
1-Jumper Reference
Connectors measured: All in link
Most conservative: Higher measured loss
Best for: Complete link certification
FOA recommended: Yes
3-Jumper Reference
Connectors measured: Excludes end pair
Less conservative: Lower measured loss
Best for: Permanent links
TIA standard: Common method
Reference Test Jumper Quality
A reference test jumper used during loss testing must be a known-good jumper with low loss, clean connectors, and the same fiber type as the link under test. Poor-quality reference jumpers introduce measurement errors that invalidate the test.
The 1-jumper reference measures all connectors in the link (most comprehensive). The 3-jumper reference excludes end connectors (lower measured loss). Both methods require clean, high-quality reference test jumpers for accurate results.