BSI PD IEC TR 63194:2019
$167.15
Guidance on colour coding of optical fibre cables
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2019 | 38 |
This document examines the need for and intent of colour coding of optical fibre cables. Further, this document lists the major colour codes in various regions throughout the world. Noting that decades of discussion of a universal recommended colour coding scheme has failed to bring about an agreement, this document does not intend to promote any listed colour code above any other.
This document includes regional information on the colour coding of units when different from the fibre code, and of jackets to convey information about the types of fibres within, or the types of performance expected. It also includes information on colours beyond the basic 12 set out in IEC 60304.
This document is not a normative document, but, rather, a guide to the subject of colour coding of cables.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
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2 | undefined |
4 | CONTENTS |
7 | FOREWORD |
9 | INTRODUCTION 0.1 General 0.2 Background in other documents |
10 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions 4 Rationale |
11 | 5 Fibre colour coding 5.1 Intent 5.2 Historic IEC 60794-2 colour code (for guidance) |
12 | 5.3 Colour coding for fibres 13 through 16 5.4 Other coding schemes 6 Unit and group coding 6.1 Unit coding Tables Table 1 – Colour coding sequence for individual fibres or buffers Table 2 – Colours for individual fibres, buffers, or other elements 13 through 16 |
13 | 6.2 Group coding 6.3 Coding of tubes in composite cables, IEC 60794-2 6.4 Other coding schemes 7 Jacket colour coding 7.1 General Table 3 – Colour coding scheme for tubes in hybrid or composite cables |
14 | 7.2 IEC 60794-2 jacket colour code 7.2.1 Historic IEC jacket colour code 7.2.2 Current IEC jacket colour code Table 4 – Colour coding of cable outer sheaths Table 5 – Colour coding of cable outer sheaths by fibre type |
15 | 7.3 Jacket coding by striping 7.4 Other jacket colour code 8 Guidance on the measurement of colour 8.1 General 8.2 Preparation of specimens for colour measurement 8.3 Specification of colour Table 6 – Example of centroid values for base colours in Munsell and R*a*L systems |
16 | Annex A (informative)German colour code A.1 Fibre colour coding A.2 German counting code for tubes stranded in a layer Table A.1 – Colour coding sequence for individual fibres |
17 | A.3 Jacket colour coding Table A.2 – Counting code and colours from the German specification |
18 | Annex B (informative)North-American colour code B.1 Fibre colour coding Table B.1 – Individual fibre, unit, and group identification for up to 12 elements in a set |
20 | Table B.2 – Individual fiber, unit, and group identification for up to 16 elements in a set |
21 | B.2 Unit coding B.3 Jacket colour coding Table B.3 – Sample identification markings |
22 | Table B.4 – North American preferred coding scheme for indoor cable jackets |
23 | Annex C (informative)Swedish colour code S12 C.1 Fibre colour coding S12 C.2 Unit coding scheme S12 C.2.1 General C.2.2 Sequence for individual fibres within a tube/fibre-unit/bundle and for individual tubes/fibre-units/yarns, etc. C.2.3 Sequence for tubes stranded around a central part Table C.1 – Sequence for individual fibres within a tube/fibre-unit/bundle and for individual tubes/fibre-units/yarns, etc. |
24 | C.3 Jacket colour coding Figures Figure C.1 – Sequence of tubes by position |
25 | Annex D (informative)Swiss colour code D.1 Fibre colour coding Table D.1 – Colour coding sequence for individual fibres or buffers in mini-breakout cables |
26 | D.2 Unit coding D.3 Jacket colour coding Figure D.1 – Example of an 18-way stranded loose tube cable Table D.2 – Colour coding for buffered fibres in simplex, duplex or breakout cables Table D.3 – Colour coding and sequence for loose tubesstranded around a central part |
27 | Figure D.2 – Example of an outdoor cable, black with orange stripes Table D.4 – Colour coding for sub-cables and outer sheaths of indoor cables Table D.5 – Colour for outer sheaths of outdoor cables |
28 | Annex E (informative)Chinese colour code E.1 Fibre colour coding Table E.1 – Colour coding for individual fibres Table E.2 – Colour coding for fibre counts up to 24 |
29 | E.2 Unit coding Figure E.1 – Sequence of tubes by position Table E.3 – Colour coding for loose tubes up to 12 |
30 | Figure E.2 – Example of a 24-tube stranded loose tube cable Table E.4 – Colour coding for loose tubes up to 24 |
31 | E.3 Jacket colour coding Figure E.3 – Example of T Mark Colour Code Table E.5 – Chinese colour coding scheme for indoor cable jackets |
32 | Annex F (informative)Japanese colour code F.1 Fibre colour coding Figure F.1 – Colour coding scheme based on optical fibre ribbon Table F.1 – Japanese colour coding for underground optical cable |
33 | F.2 Unit coding by identification strip Figure F.2 – Identification strip to bundle several optical fibre ribbons Table F.2 – Japanese colour coding for aerial optical cable Table F.3 – Colour coding of identification strip |
34 | F.3 Jacket colour coding of multi-fibre indoor cable Figure F.3 – Overview of high-count indoor cable Table F.4 – Jacket colour coding in high-count indoor cable |
35 | Annex G (informative)Brazilian colour code G.1 Fibre colour coding G.2 Unit colour coding of buffer tubes G.3 Jacket colour coding Table G.1 – Brazilian colour coding for fibre identification |
36 | Bibliography |