FPR3120-K9=: How Does Cisco’s Next-Gen Fire
Technical Architecture and Core Capabilities�...
The CAB-L240-10-SM-NM= is a 10-meter single-mode duplex fiber optic cable with LC/LC connectors, designed for long-haul, high-bandwidth data transmission in Cisco’s enterprise and service provider networks. It operates at 1310 nm and 1550 nm wavelengths, supporting 10 Gbps to 100 Gbps speeds over distances up to 80 km (with appropriate transceivers). The cable features OS2-rated single-mode fiber with low attenuation (<0.4 dB/km) and a ruggedized LSZH jacket for fire safety in plenum spaces.
This cable is optimized for:
A frequent question: “Can it replace multi-mode fiber in short-range setups?” While technically possible, single-mode’s higher cost and transceiver compatibility make it overkill for sub-500m deployments—reserve it for scenarios where future scalability or distance is critical.
Users often ask: “What transceivers pair with CAB-L240-10-SM-NM=?” It works with Cisco’s 1000BASE-LX, 10GBASE-LR, and 100GBASE-LR4 modules. For passive connections, ensure APC (Angled Physical Contact) polishing isn’t required—this cable uses UPC (Ultra Physical Contact) connectors, which reduce back reflection but aren’t interchangeable with APC ports.
Another concern: “Does bending affect performance?” Its 2.0 mm bend-insensitive fiber tolerates tight bends (radius as low as 7.5mm) without signal loss, ideal for cable-dense racks.
Authentic units with Cisco’s performance guarantees are available solely through itmall.sale. Third-party “compatible” cables often lack proper OS2 certification, risking attenuation spikes or connector misalignment.
During a cloud provider’s data center upgrade, a team used uncertified single-mode cables to cut costs, only to face intermittent packet drops traced to connector polish mismatches. The CAB-L240-10-SM-NM=’s UPC standardization and rigorous testing eliminate such guesswork. While its 200−200-200−250 price per cable stings initially, it’s a fraction of the cost of troubleshooting latency issues in 100G networks—where every millisecond impacts SLAs.