Pulse Broadband and CommScope drive Lake Region Electric Co-op EPON FTTH trial

Oct. 2, 2012
Hulbert, OK-based Lake Region Electric Cooperative will embark on a trial of EPON-based fiber to the home (FTTH). Pulse Broadband will design and manage the construction of the FTTH network build, which will use EPON gear from CommScope Inc.

Hulbert, OK-based Lake Region Electric Cooperative will embark on a trial of EPON-based fiber to the home (FTTH). Pulse Broadband will design and manage the construction of the FTTH network build, which will use EPON gear from CommScope Inc.

Pulse Broadband will base the network design on a distributed tap architecture, which it says reduces fiber and labor costs during installation as well as subsequent maintenance expenses, particularly in low-density applications. The distributed-tap approach extends four to eight fibers from the central office to “taps” in the field. Single-fiber drops from the taps connect to individual subscribers.

“Our fiber-to-the-home broadband project is all about the commitment we have as an electric cooperative to improving the lives of the members we serve,” stated Hamid Vahdatipour, CEO of Lake Region Electric Cooperative. “Members in our trial area don’t have sufficient high-speed Internet options, so they’ve shown overwhelming support for this initiative. We evaluated several broadband technologies with Pulse Broadband and chose fiber-to-the-home using distributed tap and CommScope’s EPON solutions because the combination provided the bandwidth, scalability, interoperability, and affordability we needed to make this project successful over the long run.”

“We applaud the Lake Region management team and board of directors for having the leadership and foresight to approve a fiber-based solution for their broadband trial,” said Bill Shreffler, CEO at Pulse Broadband. “Lake Region is another compelling example that fiber-to-the-home networks are financially viable for electric cooperatives in rural America.”

CommScope recently announced a new line of GPON and EPON products (see "CommScope launches EPON and GPON product line").

“We are thrilled that Lake Region will be one of the first electric cooperatives in the United States to take advantage of a combined distributed tap and EPON architecture for their broadband network,” said Ric Johnsen, senior vice president, broadband, CommScope. “Pulse, with its engineering and management expertise, has pioneered making broadband profitable for low-density network operators like Lake Region through this compelling solution. We are pleased to work with them and Lake Region Electric to make broadband services available to the co-op’s customers.”

For more information on FTTx equipment and suppliers, visit the Lightwave Buyer’s Guide.

Sponsored Recommendations

On Topic: Tech Forecast for 2025/ What Will Be Hot

Dec. 9, 2024
As we wind down 2024, Lightwave’s latest on-topic eBook will examine the hot topics for 2025. AI is at the top of the minds of optical industry players supporting...

On Topic: Metro Network Evolution

Dec. 6, 2024
The metro network continues to evolve. As service providers have built out fiber in metro areas, they have offered Ethernet-based data services to businesses and other providers...

On Topic: Fiber - The Rural Equation

Oct. 29, 2024
RURAL BROADBAND:AN OPPORTUNITY AND A CHALLENGE The rural broadband market has always been a challenge for service providers. However, the recent COVID-19 pandemic highlighted ...

State of the Market: AI is Driving New Thinking in the Optical Industry

Dec. 5, 2024
The year 2024 marked an inflection point for AI. In August, OpenAI’s ChatGPT reached 200 million weekly active users. Meanwhile, McKinsey reported that 72% of ...