Is Fiber Splicing in San Mateo a permitted trade under the county?+
Low-voltage installation in San Mateo falls under California C-7 and C-10 contractor scope and, depending on scope, may require San Mateo County building or electrical permits — especially for conduit rough-in, penetrations, and rated-wall firestopping. Access Cabling pulls permits when required and handles inspections directly with the AHJ.
How long does a typical Fiber Splicing project take in San Mateo?+
Timelines depend on drop count, pathway complexity, and after-hours restrictions. A small San Mateo tenant improvement of 20–40 drops usually completes in 2–5 working days. Larger San Mateo County projects with backbone fiber, MDF/IDF buildouts, and multiple floors typically run 2–6 weeks. We publish a per-phase schedule with the quote so your GC and IT team can coordinate cutover.
Can existing cable be reused during a Fiber Splicing refresh in San Mateo?+
Sometimes. On San Mateo refresh projects we Fluke-test the existing plant first: if runs pass CAT6 or CAT6A channel spec and pathways are clean, they stay. Anything failing certification, abandoned per NEC 800.25, or unlabeled gets removed and replaced. You get a channel-by-channel keep/replace decision — not a blanket rip-and-replace bill.
Do you support multi-site rollouts anchored in San Mateo?+
Yes. Many of our San Mateo-based clients scale Fiber Splicing 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 San Mateo or Chicago.
What's the typical loss for a fusion splice?+
Under 0.05 dB for a well-executed single-mode splice with a core-alignment splicer, and typically 0.02-0.03 dB is achievable. Multimode splices run slightly higher (0.05-0.10 dB). Anything over 0.10 dB we cleave and redo.
Can you splice ribbon fiber?+
Yes — we have mass-fusion ribbon splicers (Sumitomo T-72C, Fujikura 90R) for 4/8/12-fiber ribbon common in high-count OSP and hyperscale data-center trunks. Mass fusion is 5-10x faster than single-fiber splicing on high-count cables.
What types of San Mateo businesses do you commonly serve with network infrastructure?+
In San Mateo, Access Cabling commonly serves a diverse range of businesses, including corporate offices, particularly within the downtown business district and along the 101 corridor, requiring high-bandwidth fiber and CAT6A networks. We also work extensively with retail establishments, including major stores at Hillsdale Mall and smaller boutiques, providing reliable POS and security camera cabling. Additionally, we support medical offices and specialized clinics, ensuring HIPAA-compliant and resilient network infrastructures. Our versatility addresses the unique demands of San Mateo's varied commercial ecosystem.