Given the access to a fusion splicer, you can splice the pigtail right onto the cable in a minute or less, which greatly speeds the splicing and saves significant time and cost spent on field termination. There's a moment every network installer knows well: you're standing in a telecom room with a bundle of bare fiber and a deadline, and you need to terminate it properly—fast, reliably, and without rework. While for mechanical fiber optic pigtail splicing, it precisely holds a fiber optic pigtail. Fiber optic pigtails are mainly for fast fusion splicing applications, while patch cords are for connectivity between optical transceivers, patch panels, and backbone networks. Finally, as a simple but quick method, we can cut a fiber patch cord into two pieces to make two pigtails. That is because. The most efficient way to terminate a fiber run is by using a pigtail.
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