Micro bending refers to minute but sharp bends in the fiber of a fiber optic cable that displace light and increase loss, largely preventable through proper materials and construction.
Micro bending describes very small but sharp deformations along an optical fiber, often too slight to see, that cause light to escape the core and increase the loss in a fiber link. Even minute bends can disturb the path of light traveling through the fiber, scattering some of it out of the core and reducing the signal that reaches the far end.
These tiny bends typically arise from pressure or irregularities introduced during manufacturing, cabling, or handling, such as uneven forces pressing on the fiber within the cable. Because the effect accumulates as loss, controlling micro bending is important to preserving the performance of a fiber optic link, particularly over longer distances.
Most micro bending can be avoided through correct selection of materials and proper cabling, handling, and termination practices that protect the fiber from concentrated stress. Cable constructions designed to cushion and support the fiber help prevent the small deformations that would otherwise degrade performance, which is why construction quality matters in fiber cable.
Because the loss it introduces accumulates along a link, controlling micro bending through construction and handling is part of ensuring that a fiber path delivers the performance its specifications promise over the full distance of a run.
At Windy City Wire, the focus on quality fiber optic cable connects directly to constructions designed to protect fibers from stresses like those causing micro bending. Supplying cable engineered to cushion and support its fibers helps preserve signal integrity across commercial communication links.