Saturday, May 9, 2026
Fiber optic cable - repair.
Now, cutting a fiber optic cable doesn’t make it 100% impossible to repair.
But if it’s a complex cable, the repair can be brutally delicate.
Fiber optic cables don’t carry electricity like copper wires.
They carry light through thin strands of glass.
So when one gets cut, you can’t just twist the ends together and wrap them in tape.
Technicians have to strip the cable, clean the glass, cut the ends with extreme precision, align the fibers perfectly, and often fuse them together with a tiny electric arc.
That process is called fusion splicing.
And on a major cable, there may not be just one fiber inside.
There can be dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of tiny glass strands, each one needing to be matched, spliced, protected, and tested.
So no, a cut fiber cable isn’t 100% useless forever.
But repairing a complex one can be less like fixing a wire…
And more like performing surgery on a bundle of glass hairs carrying the internet.
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