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Page Title: V-Grooved Splices
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Mechanical and Fusion Splices
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Construction Electrician Intermediate - Electricity handbook for electricians
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Rotary Splices

Figure 6-5.—A glass or ceramic alignment tube for mechanical splicing. diameter of the alignment tube. If the inner diameter is too large, splice loss will increase because of fiber misalignment. If the inner diameter is too small, it is impossible to insert the fiber into the tube. V-GROOVED  SPLICES Mechanical splices also may use either a grooved substrate  or  positioning  rods  to  form  suitable V-grooves  for  mechanical  splicing.  The  basic V-grooved device relies on an open-grooved substrate to perform fiber alignment. When you are inserting the fibers into the grooved substrate, the V-groove aligns the cladding surface of each fiber end. A transparent adhesive makes the splice permanent by securing the fiber  ends  to  the  grooved  substrate.  Figure  6-6 illustrates this type of open V-grooved splice. V-grooved  splices  may  involve  sandwiching the butted ends of two prepared fibers between a V-grooved  substrate  and  a  flat,  glass  plate. Additional  V-grooved  devices  use  two  or  three positioning  rods  to  form  a  suitable  V-groove  for splicing.  The  V-grooved  device  that  uses  two  pois- tioning rods is the spring V-grooved splice. This splice uses a groove formed by two rods positioned in a bracket to align the fiber ends. The diameter of the  positioning  rods  permits  the  outer  surface  of each fiber end to extend above the groove formed by the rods. A flat spring presses the fiber ends into the  groove  maintaining  fiber  alignment.  Trans- parent  adhesive  completes  the  assembly  process by  bonding  the  fiber  ends  and  providing  index matching.   Figure   6-7   is   an   illustration   of   the spring V-grooved splice. A variation of this splice Figure 6-6.—Open V-grooved splice. 6-7

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