by M***s on 12/10/2024
OSFPs are very large and heavy and the fiber breaks easily. A two-splitter cable will have three large transceiver ends. A four-splitter cable will have five transceivers. That would almost certainly make it easy to break the fiber during installation - especially for a 30 meter AOC.
by E***n on 12/11/2024
by B***x on 12/10/2024
by F***y on 12/10/2024
The QSFP-2Q200G-2QAOxxx cable is a cost-effective 2x 200Gb/s to 2x 200Gb/s active optical splitter cable (AOC) with an EEPROM on each QSFP56 end. It provides product and status monitoring information that can be read by the host system, and it complies with SFF-8665/RoHS/FF-8636 standards.
by A***a on 12/10/2024
by W***h on 12/03/2023
The primary use of the cable is for linking 200G Top-of-Rack (ToR) or Leaf switches with Spine switches within a fat-tree network structure. It serves to enable HDR InfiniBand QSFP56 ports on switches to function as dual HDR100 connections.
by FS.com on 12/04/2023
by W***h on 12/01/2023
This product uses Semtech chip, which has the advantages of high integration, low power consumption and low cost
by FS.com on 12/03/2023
A single 2x200G HDR Splitter Cable with 4 modules occupying 4 ports achieves 100G bidirectional bandwidth in the same fully interconnected setup between two Spine switches and two Leaf switches. In contrast, using HDR 200G direct connection cables requires 4 cables and 8 switch ports to achieve 200G bidirectional bandwidth. While direct connection cables offer increased bandwidth, they limit network scalability due to port constraints compared to the 2x200G Splitter Cable.
by FS.com on 11/30/2023
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