SFP 1,25 Giga 120km

SFP 1,25 Giga  dual fibre, distance 120Km, avec fonction de diagnostique digital  DDM

Product Description

RoHS Compliant 1.25Gbps 1550nm Optical Transceiver 120km Reach

SFP transceivers are high performance, cost effective modules supporting dual data-rate of 1.25Gbps/1.0625Gbps and 120km, transmission distance with SMF.

The transceiver consists of three sections: a DFB laser transmitter, a APD photodiode integrated with a trans-impedance preamplifier (TIA) and MCU control unit. All modules satisfy class I laser safety requirements.The transceivers are compatible with SFP Multi-Source Agreement (MSA) and SFF-8472. For further information, please refer to SFP MSA.

The SFP transceivers are high performance, cost effective modules supporting data-rate of 155Mbps up to 120km, transmission distance with SMF.
The transceiver consists of three sections: a uncooled DFB laser transmitter, a PIN photodiode integrated with a trans-impedance preamplifier (TIA) and MCU control unit. All modules satisfy class I laser safety requirements.
The transceivers are compatible with SFP Multi-Source Agreement (MSA) and SFF-8472. For further information, please refer to SFP MSA.

Models et Références

TS-G59-120LC          SFP 1.25G SFP  SM 1550nm FP 120KM LC (D-port LC), DDM ( compatible cisco)

●Supports 1.25Gbps/1.0625Gbps bit rates
●Duplex LC connector
●Hot pluggable SFP footprint
●1550nm DFB laser transmitter and APD photo-detector
●Applicable for 120Km SMF connection
●Low power consumption, < 1.0W
●Digital Diagnostic Monitor Interface
●Compliant with SFP MSA and SFF-8472
●Very low EMI and excellent ESD protection
●Operating case temperature:
Commerical:0 to 70 °C     Industrial:-40 to 85 °C
Applications
●Gigabit Ethernet
●Fiber Channel
●Switch to Switch interface
●Switched backplane applications
●Router/Server interface
●Other optical transmission systems

What  the DDM use for? DDM is Digital-diagnostic-monitoring which provides a user with critical information concerning the status of the transmitted and received signals.

This approach allows for better fault isolation and error detection.