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Procedure for Pulling Horizontal Data & Voice Cables in Conduits Using Fishtape

Overview

Horizontal cable is installed between the telecommunications closet and the work area outlets for workstations. It supports many different kinds of information for its users:

Pulling horizontal cabling is one of the most important jobs of a successful installation. Because the cable seems bulky and well protected, some cabling installers incorrectly believe that it is almost indestructible. Cable must never be bent or kinked excessively.

Conduit installations are usually designed to be parallel or perpendicular to the external walls of the building. No one conduit segment will be more than 30 m (98 ft) in length and no more than two 90-degree bends are allowed in one segment. Exceeding these limits increases the coefficient of friction and can possibly stretch the cable and damage it.

A pull string is a thin cord used to pull cable through the conduit. The pull string must extend through the entire length of the conduit before cable can be pulled.

This can be done by a manual method using fishtape or by pressurized air methods using a foam rat or a foam ball attached to a pull string. Fishtape passes through the conduit to reach the pull string attached to the cable at the far end. Some fishtapes have swivel-type clips on the end for attaching to objects that need to be pulled back through the conduit. Fishtape is used to pull the string through the conduit, not for pulling the actual cable. Some pull string is designed to break if excessive tension is placed on the cable.

Horizontal cabling in conduit may require the use of a suitable lubricant. This is necessary only for high-pair-count cable. Many products are available for lubricating the cable as it enters the conduit to assure a smooth pull.

Always label cables and their reels prior to pulling cable into place. It is easier to identify and label the cables before they are pulled through the conduit.

The building plans or blueprints are the record of what is in the building. After the installation is complete, the building owner has the as-built plans to refer to for future work. It is a lasting record of cable information that documents the placing of cables.

Steps for Conduit Pulling

NOTE: A common general practice is to count ceiling tiles of known lengths, such as 0.6 m (2 ft) by 0.6 m (2 ft) lay-in or 0.6 m (2 ft) by 0.6 m (2 ft) decorator tile.

Pulling the Cable

Identify cables.

Document cable information

Job site clean-up

Keeping a job site clean prevents development of safety hazards, reflects on the professionalism of the cabling installer and the cabling installation company. General housekeeping specifics include but are not limited to:

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