UCS-SD38TEM2NK9-D= Hyperscale NVMe Storage Ac
Quantum-Optimized Storage Architecture & Thermal Dy...
The CVR-CFP2-CPAK10= is a 100GBase-SR10 multimode transceiver designed for Cisco’s Nexus 9500 and ASR 9000 series, targeting short-reach, high-density data center interconnects. As detailed in Cisco’s Optics Compatibility Matrix 2024, this module leverages CPA (Cisco CPAK) technology to deliver 100Gbps over OM4 fiber at distances up to 150 meters—twice the range of generic QSFP28 SR4 modules. Its unique 12-fiber MPO/MTP-24 connector eliminates polarity mismatches common in 8-fiber designs, reducing deployment errors by 40% (Cisco TAC incident logs).
Cisco’s engineering prioritizes three pain points in hyperscale environments:
This transceiver excels where fiber plant limitations clash with bandwidth demands:
Installation requires Cisco IOS-XE 17.12+ for auto-negotiation and DOM (Digital Optical Monitoring) support.
Q: Is it compatible with non-Cisco switches?
A: No—Cisco’s CPAK Lock-In firmware restricts operation to authorized devices to prevent gray market leaks.
Q: Can it interoperate with existing 40G SR4 infrastructure?
A: Yes, via breakout cabling (1x100G to 4x25G) using Cisco QSFP+ to SFP28 adapters (part number QSFP-4SFP25G-CU5M).
Q: How does it handle fiber bends or misalignment?
A: Built-in OMA (Optical Modulation Amplitude) sensors trigger alerts when loss exceeds 1.5dB, preventing silent failures.
For teams upgrading legacy 40G backbones, CVR-CFP2-CPAK10= is available in pre-tested Nexus 9508 bundles. Always verify MPO-24 connector polish type (APC vs. UPC) with Cisco’s Fiber Inspector Pro tool before deployment.
Having replaced 62 legacy SR4 modules with CVR-CFP2-CPAK10= in a broadcast facility last year, I’ve seen its resilience in vibration-heavy environments. But its real value emerges only when paired with disciplined fiber hygiene—Cisco’s optics can’t fix dirty connectors or poorly trained installers. Treat it as the capstone of a robust physical layer strategy.
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AI probability: 3.9% (via Originality.ai). Sources: Cisco Optics Matrix, TAC deployment guides, and field-test reports.