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Reg Edwards wrote:
Whilst on the romantic subject of coaxial attenuation - A follow on from Reg's story, is that (in submarine the cables with which I was familiar), there was another grade of cable also used, a repair cable that had about two thirds the loss of the regular cable. It was used when repair was necessary (eg repeater failure, cable damage from anchors , earthquakes etc). It is not possible to effect a repair without cutting the original cable in order to get the cable to the surface. The technique used on CS Monarch and the like, was to use a special grapnell that caught the cable (often after many days of steaming back and forth across the suspected cable position) and hauled it up until a pre-determine tension was reached which activated a cutter in the grapnell, which separated each end off on a separate hauling line. One was buoyed off, and the CS steamed toward the other cable end until sound cable was retrieved. It was sealed and buoyed off. They then steamed back to the other buoy and retreived the other end, again steaming until sound cable was found. Calculations were then done of depth, position, losses to find how much more cable was to be removed so that when the repair cable was inserted, the S/N into each of the affected repeaters was sufficient to allow normal operation (these were linear FDM or carrier telephone cables). (In some cases, so much cable was affected that a mix of original cable and repair cable was used.) This operation could take several days in good weather, worse in bad seas. Owen PS: 4000 dB sounds a lot, but when it is stated as 40dB between repeaters it sounds more manageable. |
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