Do you support multi-site rollouts anchored in Palo Alto?+
Yes. Many of our Palo Alto-based clients scale Fiber Testing to additional sites across California and nationally. A single PM standardizes drawings, materials, testing thresholds, and closeout format across every location, so IT sees identical documentation whether the site is in Palo Alto or Chicago.
Do you offer manufacturer warranties on Fiber Testing in Palo Alto?+
Yes. As a certified installer for Panduit, CommScope, Leviton, and Belden, Palo Alto and Silicon Valley projects can be registered for a 25-year performance and applications warranty on structured cabling components — copper and fiber, patch panels through work-area outlet. Coverage details are documented in the closeout package.
What documentation do we get at the end of a Palo Alto Fiber Testing install?+
Every Palo Alto project closes with Fluke DSX (or OTDR for fiber) certification reports for every port, a TIA-606-B labeled patch schedule, redlined as-built drawings, rack elevations, warranty registration, and a MAC-ready cabling database. Your IT team can pick it up cold on day one.
Can you handle after-hours Fiber Testing in Palo Alto to avoid business disruption?+
Absolutely. Night, weekend, and phased cutover windows are standard on Palo Alto tenant improvements, hospital environments, retail cores, and 24-hour operations across Santa Clara County. We run swing shifts, dark-window pulls, and cutovers scheduled around production without inflating the price.
What about high-speed links — 100G, 400G?+
For links approaching optical budget limits or long single-mode spans we add chromatic dispersion (CD) and polarization-mode dispersion (PMD) testing per TIA-455 and manufacturer optics specs. We use Fluke or EXFO test heads for both.
What's the difference between an OLTS and an OTDR?+
An OLTS (Optical Loss Test Set) measures end-to-end insertion loss with a light source and power meter — one number per wavelength per link. An OTDR (Optical Time-Domain Reflectometer) sends pulses down the fiber and measures reflections back, producing a map of every event (splice, connector, break) with distance and loss. Both are required for TIA-568 Tier 2 certification.
Does Access Cabling handle projects that affect multiple sites or campuses in the Palo Alto area?+
Absolutely. Many of our Palo Alto clients, especially those in technology and education, operate across multiple buildings or campuses. We have extensive experience designing and implementing unified network infrastructures that connect disparate locations via fiber optic backbones, allowing for centralized management and seamless data flow. This includes multi-site rollouts and campus-wide deployments across the Stanford Research Park and beyond.