Fiber Loss Calculator

Model cable attenuation, connector loss, splice loss, splitter loss, and margin. Test link budgets realistically. Build dependable optical paths with clearer power reserve planning.

Enter Fiber Link Parameters

Use positive loss values in dB or dB/km. Enter transmitter power and receiver sensitivity in dBm.

Reset

Example Data Table

Sample Item Value
Fiber typeSingle-mode OS2
Wavelength1310 nm
Fiber length12.00 km
Attenuation coefficient0.35 dB/km
Connectors4 at 0.25 dB each
Splices8 at 0.10 dB each
Splitter loss3.40 dB
Misc passive loss0.50 dB
Bend and aging loss0.30 dB
Safety margin3.00 dB
Transmitter power0.00 dBm
Receiver sensitivity-18.00 dBm
Required reserve3.00 dB
Total link loss13.20 dB
Expected receiver power-13.20 dBm
Available margin4.80 dB
StatusPASS

Formula Used

Total Link Loss (dB) = Fiber Loss + Connector Loss + Splice Loss + Splitter Loss + Misc Passive Loss + Bend/Aging Loss + Safety Margin

Fiber Loss (dB) = Fiber Length in km × Attenuation Coefficient in dB/km

Connector Loss (dB) = Number of Connectors × Loss per Connector

Splice Loss (dB) = Number of Splices × Loss per Splice

Available Power Budget (dB) = Transmitter Power − Receiver Sensitivity

Expected Receiver Power (dBm) = Transmitter Power − Total Link Loss

Available Margin (dB) = Expected Receiver Power − Receiver Sensitivity

Minimum Required Transmit Power (dBm) = Receiver Sensitivity + Total Link Loss + Required Reserve

Maximum Theoretical Length (km) = (Available Power Budget − Required Reserve − Fixed Non-Fiber Losses) ÷ Attenuation Coefficient

This model assumes additive optical losses in decibels and checks whether remaining margin satisfies the required reserve target.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter a project or link name for easy identification.
  2. Select the fiber type and operating wavelength.
  3. Input fiber length and choose the correct unit.
  4. Enter attenuation coefficient in dB per kilometer.
  5. Add connector count, splice count, and per-item loss values.
  6. Include splitter, coupler, patching, bend, and reserve losses.
  7. Enter transmitter power and receiver sensitivity in dBm.
  8. Set the reserve margin required by your design standard.
  9. Press the calculate button to display results above the form.
  10. Download the result summary as CSV or PDF when needed.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does this calculator measure?

It estimates total optical attenuation for a fiber link and compares expected receive power against receiver sensitivity and reserve requirements.

2. Why is attenuation coefficient important?

The coefficient sets how much signal is lost per kilometer. Even a small change can materially alter long-distance power budgets.

3. Should connector and splice losses always be included?

Yes. These point losses are often small individually, but together they can significantly reduce remaining link margin.

4. What is safety margin?

Safety margin is extra design headroom added to cover aging, dirt, temperature drift, future patching, and field uncertainty.

5. What does PASS or FAIL mean?

PASS means available margin meets or exceeds the required reserve. FAIL means the link needs lower loss, shorter length, or stronger optics.

6. Can I use meters or miles?

Yes. The calculator converts meters, kilometers, miles, and feet into kilometers before applying attenuation in dB per kilometer.

7. Why is receiver sensitivity negative?

Many optical receivers can detect very low power levels, so sensitivity is commonly expressed as a negative dBm value.

8. Is the maximum theoretical length a guaranteed distance?

No. It is an estimate based on entered losses and margin targets. Installation quality and actual components can reduce usable distance.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.