Guides

Fiber Installation Guide for Northern Colorado Properties

Plan fiber links between buildings, network closets, shops, barns, offices, and high-speed equipment.

Fiber connections in network equipment

Plan fiber links between buildings, network closets, shops, barns, offices, and high-speed equipment.

Why use fiber

Fiber supports long distances, high capacity, and electrical isolation.

It is especially useful between separate buildings.

Single-mode versus multimode

Single-mode is often selected for new outside-plant and longer-term backbone use, while multimode appears in shorter internal links.

The choice depends on distance, optics, and system design.

Conduit and pathway

Fiber needs an appropriate pathway, bend radius, pull plan, and protection.

Spare conduit or pull strings can simplify future expansion.

Termination and testing

Connectors, splice methods, enclosures, and testing should match the installation.

Cleanliness is critical for optical performance.

Remote building design

The remote building still needs local power, switching, WiFi, and PoE devices.

Fiber provides the data link, not endpoint power.

Serving Northern Colorado

Berthoud WiFi is based in Berthoud and serves Loveland, Fort Collins, Longmont, Erie, Boulder, Windsor, Johnstown, Timnath, Mead, Frederick, Firestone, Wellington, Greeley, and nearby communities.

Frequently asked questions

Can fiber power cameras or access points?

No. Local power and switching are required.

Is fiber better than a wireless bridge?

Fiber is generally the strongest permanent option when trenching or conduit is practical.

How far can fiber run?

The distance depends on fiber type and optics, but it greatly exceeds standard copper Ethernet.

Can fiber connect a barn?

Yes. It is an excellent option for barns and shops with available conduit.

Related resources

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