Your actions at height, equipment and speed of action when connecting the cable are respected. Thank you for showing it. In Europe, in cities, everything is underground. But on the country site it is exactly as you showed.
From the UK as a telecoms engineer, i climb 15metre poles the lot.. got an interview for a company ( uk company ) to spread to the US. super excited and hope i get it. nice video mate. thanks for showing us how the US do it!
it's good only if you live in Florida or any place without winters, good luck doing buried jobs when the ground and handholes are frozen, even aerial splicing in freezing temp is a nightmare.
A tip i learnt along the years, when you place your ladder on a strand like that or midsection, get your hooks on it and leave your ladder short, so when you go up and put weight on it itll bite and have you secure.
All the best from Grimsby Ont Canada I worked on broadband for Rogers in the 70's , then Cogeco, Rogers , and Bell , Fiber to the Home underground mostly
It is too bad we cannot post pictures here. We just had fiber service ran in our neighborhood, and after looking at the trunk line, in two places where they put an expansion loop in the run the loop is that tight that there is a genuine kink in the line. It looks like a kink in a garden hose it is that tight. I am scheduled for my install in a few days so will be interesting to see what the tech says when I point it out to them. Thanks for the great videos too!!
It’s likely your line (light level) with be affected. But also not. Fibre is a lot more resilient than it seems. Definitely sounds like a sloppy install
Why did i find this interesting? Lol Nice work. You have been at this a long while and know what your doing. I just had fiber installed. Used to be a network guy.
I work for Bell Technical Solutions in Kitchener, I just moved to structured cabling after doing this for 11 years. Where is this? Great work by the way, we do it a little different but same result.
@@FyBurz Thank you. I'm with EPCOM, and we offer a variety of competitively priced fiber optic options. If you're interested, I'd be happy to share some information with you.
Thank you. I'm with EPCOM, and we offer a variety of competitively priced fiber optic options. If you're interested, I'd be happy to share some information with you.@@FyBurz
sorry im commenting this after a whole year , we just got fiber optic installed on poles in our neighborhood but im wondering if those fiber cables gonna be affected by weather , to be more clear will weather affect on my internet speed ?
I’m also an installer, it’s similar but have some diffences on how we do it here (Canada). As commented by jason, we use J hooks from the pole most of the time, we hook it up 12 inches above the network to get to client’s mast. Rule of thumb, we follow the power line anyway. And 12 inches from the power line is also for us, we are not allowed to get closer even to the low tension lines (well, as much as we can).
@@FyBurz 3 months later and it's sounding like I'll have the job soon! Did a ride along with 2 friends of mine that work for the company I applied to. Doing some training with them so when I get an actual offer I'm ready to start asap. Been watching your videos to get more ideas on how the jobs go, thank you for uploading these!
What state are you in? I do the same thing but for Altice. That fiber drop you're working with looks like Verizon. Over here in NY we gotta splice into pdos where the light is coming from and splice at the end of the drop with a pigtail so the home installer can test for light.
Hey bro dope video, im a field tech for spectrum and i noticed your hooks on the ladder weren’t actually on the strand i could never lol pretty sketchy.
With experience comes more risk 😅 but nah I usually do it so I have room to slide one way or the other if needed. This was weird cuz the stand was very slack.
Nothing really. My isp calls them NAPs (network access point) but in general we call them MPT(Multi port terminal) which is a more generic term that applies more broadly.
So you guys are pre-installing home's? No actual service provided? Also what part of the world is this? In my market it is against code to attach anything to the power mast.
My drops are order based tech comes behind me to install. I’m in BC Canada. No logic to be against code. It’s the tallest strongest point design to attached cables to. It’s protocol here to attach on mast.
Great job, dude. Answer me a question, please: what if a drop cable breaks. How exactly do you splice it? I am sure that in a different way than a multi-core cable
Depends on length. Usually just replace. On longer drops. Sometimes we take it back to the last pole and splice it there. There’s lots of variables though.
Umm. Idk the brand. I usually buy the 10 packs at the hardware store. They’re pretty thin and flexible. Just dipped in neoprene maybe. I like these specifically because they work with my phone. And they’re pretty durable. It’s like duty work so it gives me the protection I need while still maintaining full range of motion.
attaching the J-hook would cost you an extra attachment charge by the owning company of the poles. definitely don't want to use those if height clearance is not required
Gross. Pre-connectorized drops. I work for a fttx isp and we only have a few markets left using this, we just fusion splice on a pigtail now and connect it into our terminals. So much nicer than having to carry around a bunch of different sized reels. Feels bad man!
@@FyBurz your company does it the right way, maybe a small or local ISP. This is the best way to break up the work load, excellent work with the drop route as well. At a huge ISP field techs are treated like garbage, it’s great you have the opportunity to enjoy what you do!
@@FyBurz Our company has bullied out service partners or contractors for installs, sucks because we " in house " have tripped work load. And there were some that did good work, but overall they just didn’t pay them enough by the jobs. Those guys should’ve been paid by the hour and we would’ve had less work load on the in house guys. Going on a tangent, but it’s cool to see another guy hanging fiber drops. What sort of winch do you use when you hang a span over 400 ‘ 120 meters ? I usually pull tight then hook the drop hanger to a ratchet strap.
I do it all 🤷🏻♂️ I can’t run a drop underground to a house that has aerial utility and vice versa. This area is all aerial. If the builder put a conduit to the pole I would have used that.
@FyBurz our power comes from a pole. Have a tech coming January 6th to install fiber. Supposedly they are going to dig a trench. In my town, ultilities put fiber underground.
All this talk about the strand, I wonder why you attached to the electric riser when there seems to be a perfectly good telecom riser. Under NEC attaching to the electric riser is not allowed but violated all the time.
Here that is the standard. All telecom attachments go to the hydro mast. They’re designed to take the load. Telco masts are often under 1.5” and the mast clamps don’t even natively fit on them.
as a coax supe using this to learn and reteach fiber, holy fuck please be more careful on the ladder. neither times up were you properly hooked or strapped off. you do good clean work, please be safe even casually and especially while being instructional
@@FyBurz trust me i understand. when i'm alone i don't strap off and i'm pretty loose with safety. but a couple years ago at spectrum there was a guy who fell due to not having proper EQ or safety knowledge and since then anyone i personally know would be fired on the spot for not being properly hooked onto the strand, and not using a safety harness up top. regardless, thank you for the very educational content
@@f2bacon I always wear a harness and you might not see it but I’m usually hooked up to the strand as well. In some situations I’d rather fall than be stuck hanging. I’ve had poles snap on me and luckily I wasn’t strapped because it would have likely lead to me breaking my legs.
He’s talking about your ladder hooks. You should let your hooks rest on the strand when climbing the strand. Your hooks were almost a foot above the strand. Also, when you belt off, your belt should be long enough so that you can wrap from one side of your climbing gear then to the strand on one side of the ladder then to the inside of the ladder then back to the other side of the ladder and finally attaching to the other ring of your climbing gear. It appears you go straight from your climbing gear to the strand.
@@Wav10001 I’m very aware of how most people use their ladder and lanyard. I’ve explained in multiple videos why I leave my hooks above strand. (Which I don’t always do) I have my way of doing it. To some it may seem unsafe and it is to a certain extent at the gain of efficiency. I have a lot of experience with ladders and heights so I can safely do my work while still maintaining efficiency. Also I want to note that my ladder is usually placed very near the MPT/NAP. And if I were to place the hooks tight to strand I wouldn’t be able to effectively route my fibre through clamps. To summarize we all have an our way of doing the work, granted I could maximize my safety. But if any of you have ever worked construction you all know there are ways to work safely yet efficiently.
In America if you ran that drop you did it wrong way. You can’t use that strand that belongs to cable. Just like cable companies can’t put clamps on phone or fiber strand. You’ll have to go off the pole
Your span clamp in on wrong should be a 1/4turn more the last clamp you put on the RClamp will slip off in a heavy wind. A bell senior installer trainer
Sorry but that’s not up to our standards. They are either oriented up or down. With the opening always towards the slack side. Allows for more drops to pass through easily and to neatly dress the loop. Although I agree it could potentially fall off in high winds, I did zip tie it to the clamp to prevent that and tensioned it at the house accordingly as well. Interesting that Bell uses the Clamps sideways. Appreciate the insight tho, Thanks. 6:15
Our strands are mostly shared here, and no one came off the pole as I showed in the video they’re all off the strand. Just one pole to the left is another fiber MPT
Sppsshhh. Ill clamp to anything with a support cable. If I'm running a spectrum drop with a midspan bump, but the span for spectrum is missing or broken, hello att feeder line.
@@billycole852 haha, yeah I mean no one is auditing these lines because it’s turns into a mess around. I use their strand here, they’re using ours around the corner.
Your lack of safety training is astounding. Got the job done but I can count half dozen violations. For one, learn how to use your damn climbing belt correctly. You most certainly could’ve came off the pole with a j hook and avoided that entire mess by placing under the strand on the pole. You’re not even using your hooks on the strand 🤦♂️
Read some of my replied you might get some insight into my perspective 😅. Safety is a spectrum. I agree though I could work safer. But also take much longer to do my job. Yes I could have gone to J hook. But here we come off the strand without issue.
Your actions at height, equipment and speed of action when connecting the cable are respected. Thank you for showing it. In Europe, in cities, everything is underground. But on the country site it is exactly as you showed.
So true. In italy it’s so rare to see this on poles
why was i about to say this exact thing!!! wth
Thank you sir, sorry I forgot to reply. I'm excited to travel and see telecom all over the world.
From the UK as a telecoms engineer, i climb 15metre poles the lot.. got an interview for a company ( uk company ) to spread to the US. super excited and hope i get it. nice video mate. thanks for showing us how the US do it!
I’m in Canada 😅
@@FyBurz sincere apologies! I can’t tell the difference between the accents😆
@@georgeclarke8770 😂 all good man
This looks like such a nice job. I mean, this is the stuff I love
Thanks man, yeah it’s a pretty good gig
it's good only if you live in Florida or any place without winters, good luck doing buried jobs when the ground and handholes are frozen, even aerial splicing in freezing temp is a nightmare.
@Voltomess we just don’t dig in the winter and don’t do aerial splicing for our plant. 😅
ive never worked with naps and pre term drops. Always splice cases and splicing
@@loganlosee6933 I feel for you 😅
A tip i learnt along the years, when you place your ladder on a strand like that or midsection, get your hooks on it and leave your ladder short, so when you go up and put weight on it itll bite and have you secure.
Good tip for beginners, there’s reason why I don’t and do. It’s situational, I explain in my mdu build video on why.
nah, thats just safety in general, anyone can use it, not just beginners. @@FyBurz
At bell Canada we have to have the 3rd ladder rung on the strand, it’s weird
@atomicgunpla yeah I’ve heard that before
I just started 2 months ago in Arizona for coax and fiber , sucks being on the strand in 112 degree weather
@@Gamelover22478 I bet. I’ve been there
@@FyBurz have you tried working in a data center ?
Nope haha
All the best from Grimsby Ont Canada I worked on broadband for Rogers in the 70's , then Cogeco, Rogers , and Bell , Fiber to the Home underground mostly
sweet, thanks for watching. I lived most my life in Brampton Ont
It is too bad we cannot post pictures here. We just had fiber service ran in our neighborhood, and after looking at the trunk line, in two places where they put an expansion loop in the run the loop is that tight that there is a genuine kink in the line. It looks like a kink in a garden hose it is that tight. I am scheduled for my install in a few days so will be interesting to see what the tech says when I point it out to them. Thanks for the great videos too!!
It’s likely your line (light level) with be affected. But also not. Fibre is a lot more resilient than it seems. Definitely sounds like a sloppy install
Why did i find this interesting? Lol
Nice work. You have been at this a long while and know what your doing.
I just had fiber installed. Used to be a network guy.
I hope because the video was interesting 😅 thank you! & sweet man what type of network work?
Clearance from 'hydro', meaning electric power service lines? Nice job once again!
Yes exactly. It’s what we call power here in Canada 😅 and thank you!
@@FyBurzthanks for the clarification!
I work for Bell Technical Solutions in Kitchener, I just moved to structured cabling after doing this for 11 years. Where is this? Great work by the way, we do it a little different but same result.
I'm in BC, structured cabling is cool, I like being outside haha
The CATV terminator tools lol honestly I hate when techs get them jammed into a house box where they don’t wanna come out
really nice video, liked the part where your co worker easily caught the screwdriver XD
Thank you for sharing. Do you procure your fiber locally?
Not sure what you mean, but my material comes from depots around my province.
@@FyBurz Thank you. I'm with EPCOM, and we offer a variety of competitively priced fiber optic options. If you're interested, I'd be happy to share some information with you.
Thank you. I'm with EPCOM, and we offer a variety of competitively priced fiber optic options. If you're interested, I'd be happy to share some information with you.@@FyBurz
sorry im commenting this after a whole year , we just got fiber optic installed on poles in our neighborhood but im wondering if those fiber cables gonna be affected by weather , to be more clear will weather affect on my internet speed ?
Negative. Weather should not affect your service whatsoever unless it causes actual damage to your line. And sorry for not replying I didn’t see this.
Thank you very much I was wondering how is gonna be like
Coming from a lineman, quite using midspan hooks as cable management. Use J hooks on poles, you make it hard to ad cables in future.
Not how we do things here. Sorry bud
I’m also an installer, it’s similar but have some diffences on how we do it here (Canada). As commented by jason, we use J hooks from the pole most of the time, we hook it up 12 inches above the network to get to client’s mast. Rule of thumb, we follow the power line anyway. And 12 inches from the power line is also for us, we are not allowed to get closer even to the low tension lines (well, as much as we can).
Can you tell me what toll pouch you where using and where you using a holster for the drill?
All toughbuilt products! My favourite
Thanks for this video man! Got an interview for a fiber company, doesn't look as scary as I thought at all
Sweet man! If you trust your equipment and work smart you’re good 👍🏼
@@FyBurz 3 months later and it's sounding like I'll have the job soon! Did a ride along with 2 friends of mine that work for the company I applied to. Doing some training with them so when I get an actual offer I'm ready to start asap. Been watching your videos to get more ideas on how the jobs go, thank you for uploading these!
@@IbanezPlayer124 that’s dope man glad to hear it! Update me when you get it. Are you in our discord ?
@@FyBurz I am not, I'll look for the link and join though!
@@IbanezPlayer124 sweet it’s in the description of most new videos 👍🏼
What state are you in? I do the same thing but for Altice. That fiber drop you're working with looks like Verizon. Over here in NY we gotta splice into pdos where the light is coming from and splice at the end of the drop with a pigtail so the home installer can test for light.
I’m in Bc Canada 😅 thankfully I don’t have to do that. All plug and play on my end. Unless I do the install myself 🥲
Hey bro dope video, im a field tech for spectrum and i noticed your hooks on the ladder weren’t actually on the strand i could never lol pretty sketchy.
With experience comes more risk 😅 but nah I usually do it so I have room to slide one way or the other if needed. This was weird cuz the stand was very slack.
@@FyBurz 😂 i dig your videos bro stay safe out there bro, hopefully i learn how to do fiber in the future looks so dope.
@@KiddFerrel it’s a pretty good gig
Why are you not keeping a 30" climbing space on pole at tap. And also why are you using the CATV strand. That would fail in our MA...
I follow all our required safety protocol. And certain strands are shared here. They use ours we use theirs.
I’d love to start a career in this! What’s the smartest path? I’m 22 and ready to start a career.
Find a telecom sub in your area and ask for a job 😅 watch my videos to learn how to do it 👍🏼
As a network engineer in the USA, whats the difference between a NAP and an MPT?
Nothing really. My isp calls them NAPs (network access point) but in general we call them MPT(Multi port terminal) which is a more generic term that applies more broadly.
Compared to the work I see your a good tech . Keep it up 👍🏼
Thanks man, I try to take pride in my work 😅
I wish I had someone else to work with. Our company would send us solo and expect a job to be done quick when its only me out there
Yea that’s rough man. It’s also safer to work with someone 👍🏼
You gotta fiber scope those drops, dirty straight from the factory a lot of time
Not part of our protocol 🤷🏻♂️ never had a problem
So you guys are pre-installing home's? No actual service provided? Also what part of the world is this? In my market it is against code to attach anything to the power mast.
My drops are order based tech comes behind me to install. I’m in BC Canada. No logic to be against code. It’s the tallest strongest point design to attached cables to. It’s protocol here to attach on mast.
Great job, dude. Answer me a question, please: what if a drop cable breaks. How exactly do you splice it? I am sure that in a different way than a multi-core cable
Or maybe you're just replacing the entire line in this case
Depends on length. Usually just replace. On longer drops. Sometimes we take it back to the last pole and splice it there. There’s lots of variables though.
@@FyBurz I'm just interested how you splice this cable. Using some special coupling or something?
@@sgt.Tackleberry watch my other videos I show how
Your work too neat my friend, cutting old tie wraps are certainly above the top, is it my impression or you only do the drops, not inside the house?
I do both, when needed. most of the work I post is outside plant. but I definitely have inside install videos
8:50 bro just casually takes out a wasp nest with his own hands 😅 great video, very interesting!
Thanks 😅
Hello, I am working in Korea. Where did you buy the clamp that ties the drop optical cables? I wonder because there is no such thing in Korea
I don’t buy them 😅 all material and accessories are from the provider. Also do you mean the wedge clamps to hang the drops ?
@@FyBurz It's a tool that pulls the optical cable tight
@@FyBurz Thank you for your answer
Hi, good job
Hey, thanks
My mind can’t handle the mess on the pole😖
How much did you make there? Briefly breakdown
I don’t really disclose my rates. But it’s enough to make it worth it 😅
I drive semi truck. 13'6 trailer for soda company what's the normal height of your lines from pole to house
I think it’s 16’ at the lowest(alley, private property)Over 24’ crossing rods
Which gloves you using?
Umm. Idk the brand. I usually buy the 10 packs at the hardware store. They’re pretty thin and flexible. Just dipped in neoprene maybe. I like these specifically because they work with my phone. And they’re pretty durable. It’s like duty work so it gives me the protection I need while still maintaining full range of motion.
Watching your videos you always leave the fiber drop cable in the drop box without termination why?
My part of the job is just to run the drop, the technician that comes to do the install does the termination
@@FyBurzdon’t you do that as well or just running the drops?
Muito top o videos trabalho com fibra óptica aqui no Brasil, sempre tive curiosidade de saber como as instalações são feita em outros paises
Where is other part of vedio?
@@pkdiary3932 what other part
@ would like to watch second part of this vedio like installation of router in home
@ I didn’t do the install on this job. I mainly do drops. But I do have install videos on my channel
are you using a go pro to record?
Yup, hero 8 black. And my iPhone
@@FyBurz Apple watch ultra and? on the arm polo eletric this is this dangerous?
@@SupremaciaCosmoTec nope
I’m training to be a fiber tech now do u have any tips to make me learn quicker
Yes sir, watch all my videos 😅
Why zip-ties? - they only last a few months before they are baked and cracked by the sun.
I use UV resistant zips. Also it’s protocol 🤷🏻♂️. We only use them to hold the waterfall off the mpt. And I replace them every time I add a drop.
attaching the J-hook would cost you an extra attachment charge by the owning company of the poles. definitely don't want to use those if height clearance is not required
Not really an issue here. It’s just common to come off strand unless clearance is required like you said
True but I New York Verizon also owns a lot of the poles. So I imagine they can do whatever they want.
@@JerdGuillaumeSam this is Canada
What’s that screwdriver called
Not sure which. I filmed this video a long time ago 😅
Very good!
Thanks!
Good
Nice❤❤
Gross. Pre-connectorized drops. I work for a fttx isp and we only have a few markets left using this, we just fusion splice on a pigtail now and connect it into our terminals. So much nicer than having to carry around a bunch of different sized reels. Feels bad man!
This is much more efficient than pig tailings imo. I don’t mind carrying a variety of drops 🤷🏻♂️
Do you just hang the drop and not have to run the outlet ? You got it made 😂 at spectrum we hang 2,000’ drops and have to complete the entire jobs 😳
😅
@@FyBurz your company does it the right way, maybe a small or local ISP. This is the best way to break up the work load, excellent work with the drop route as well. At a huge ISP field techs are treated like garbage, it’s great you have the opportunity to enjoy what you do!
@@calenbolo join our discord! discord.gg/R5TKC92TW3
I’m a sub contractor for one of the biggest isp in Canada. As well as others.
@@FyBurz Our company has bullied out service partners or contractors for installs, sucks because we " in house " have tripped work load. And there were some that did good work, but overall they just didn’t pay them enough by the jobs. Those guys should’ve been paid by the hour and we would’ve had less work load on the in house guys. Going on a tangent, but it’s cool to see another guy hanging fiber drops. What sort of winch do you use when you hang a span over 400 ‘ 120 meters ? I usually pull tight then hook the drop hanger to a ratchet strap.
@@calenbolo do you use self support fibre ? I have a video coming out tomorrow hopefully, where we use a come along. And Chicago grips.
I know how expensive it is. But why not go the extra mile and do it underground? It's safer and more reliable.
I do it all 🤷🏻♂️ I can’t run a drop underground to a house that has aerial utility and vice versa. This area is all aerial. If the builder put a conduit to the pole I would have used that.
@FyBurz our power comes from a pole. Have a tech coming January 6th to install fiber. Supposedly they are going to dig a trench. In my town, ultilities put fiber underground.
All this talk about the strand, I wonder why you attached to the electric riser when there seems to be a perfectly good telecom riser. Under NEC attaching to the electric riser is not allowed but violated all the time.
Here that is the standard. All telecom attachments go to the hydro mast. They’re designed to take the load. Telco masts are often under 1.5” and the mast clamps don’t even natively fit on them.
as a coax supe using this to learn and reteach fiber, holy fuck please be more careful on the ladder. neither times up were you properly hooked or strapped off. you do good clean work, please be safe even casually and especially while being instructional
I am very safe on my ladder, don’t worry! I have over a decade of ladder experience. And I trust my equipment.
@@FyBurz trust me i understand. when i'm alone i don't strap off and i'm pretty loose with safety. but a couple years ago at spectrum there was a guy who fell due to not having proper EQ or safety knowledge and since then anyone i personally know would be fired on the spot for not being properly hooked onto the strand, and not using a safety harness up top. regardless, thank you for the very educational content
@@f2bacon I always wear a harness and you might not see it but I’m usually hooked up to the strand as well. In some situations I’d rather fall than be stuck hanging. I’ve had poles snap on me and luckily I wasn’t strapped because it would have likely lead to me breaking my legs.
He’s talking about your ladder hooks. You should let your hooks rest on the strand when climbing the strand. Your hooks were almost a foot above the strand.
Also, when you belt off, your belt should be long enough so that you can wrap from one side of your climbing gear then to the strand on one side of the ladder then to the inside of the ladder then back to the other side of the ladder and finally attaching to the other ring of your climbing gear. It appears you go straight from your climbing gear to the strand.
@@Wav10001 I’m very aware of how most people use their ladder and lanyard. I’ve explained in multiple videos why I leave my hooks above strand. (Which I don’t always do)
I have my way of doing it. To some it may seem unsafe and it is to a certain extent at the gain of efficiency. I have a lot of experience with ladders and heights so I can safely do my work while still maintaining efficiency.
Also I want to note that my ladder is usually placed very near the MPT/NAP. And if I were to place the hooks tight to strand I wouldn’t be able to effectively route my fibre through clamps.
To summarize we all have an our way of doing the work, granted I could maximize my safety. But if any of you have ever worked construction you all know there are ways to work safely yet efficiently.
In America if you ran that drop you did it wrong way. You can’t use that strand that belongs to cable. Just like cable companies can’t put clamps on phone or fiber strand. You’ll have to go off the pole
You’re not wrong. But there are certain strands here that are shared. Kind of an unwritten understanding
Your span clamp in on wrong should be a 1/4turn more the last clamp you put on the RClamp will slip off in a heavy wind. A bell senior installer trainer
Sorry but that’s not up to our standards. They are either oriented up or down. With the opening always towards the slack side. Allows for more drops to pass through easily and to neatly dress the loop.
Although I agree it could potentially fall off in high winds, I did zip tie it to the clamp to prevent that and tensioned it at the house accordingly as well.
Interesting that Bell uses the Clamps sideways. Appreciate the insight tho, Thanks. 6:15
Wow you get help?
What do you mean?
@@FyBurz were you training? I never get help, 😆
Hlo sir i need a job
Where do you live ?
You should not be coming off of the cable companies strand. That is why everyone else went to the pole.
Our strands are mostly shared here, and no one came off the pole as I showed in the video they’re all off the strand. Just one pole to the left is another fiber MPT
Sppsshhh. Ill clamp to anything with a support cable. If I'm running a spectrum drop with a midspan bump, but the span for spectrum is missing or broken, hello att feeder line.
@@billycole852 haha, yeah I mean no one is auditing these lines because it’s turns into a mess around. I use their strand here, they’re using ours around the corner.
@@billycole852lol 😅
What a mess,looks like every installer does it different.It's an aerial eye sore.
Ngl you tossing that drop over that triplex made me cringe.
😅 no harm done
@@FyBurz I do a lot of copper work and i would not trust myself doing that :D
fucking trailer park got fiber before me cringeee
This is a laneway house 😵💫😅
Your lack of safety training is astounding. Got the job done but I can count half dozen violations. For one, learn how to use your damn climbing belt correctly. You most certainly could’ve came off the pole with a j hook and avoided that entire mess by placing under the strand on the pole. You’re not even using your hooks on the strand 🤦♂️
Read some of my replied you might get some insight into my perspective 😅. Safety is a spectrum. I agree though I could work safer. But also take much longer to do my job. Yes I could have gone to J hook. But here we come off the strand without issue.