Internet Installation Update (February 1, 2024)
Live Oak Fiber finished the week of January 22-26 with 8,462 feet of new conduit placement, passing 70 homes. The team pulled 28,702 feet of fiber. Total linear conduit placed to date is 298,719 ft (56.5 miles).
More than1,780 homes are now ready for install. The team expects to add another 300 homes to that list within the next few days.
Last week crews completed work on:
- Hardwick Lane
- Marina Drive
- Wickersham Drive
- Bartram Road
- Bosuns Circle
- Pennefeather Lane
- Treutlen Lane
- Deer Run
- Wexford Lane
- Waterford Lane
Roads working on this week:
- Deer Run
- Wickersham Drive
- Ale House Retreat
- Pennefeather Lane
- Hardwick Lane
- Bartram Road
Fiber Pullers will be working in the following areas:
- Log Landing Road
- Seawatch Drive
- Marina Drive
- Raindance Court
Splicers will be working in the following areas:
- Coggeshall Court
- Middle Marsh Retreat
- Waterside Road
- Hopscotch Lane
- Pelham Road
- Sweetgum Crossing
- Mainsail Crossing
As a reminder, this is a 14-month project of building a fiber network to offer internet. You can visit Live Oak Fiber's website (https://liveoakfiber.com/cities/the-landings-skidaway-island/) for more information or to contact them directly. Live Oak Fiber who is the service provider for the Internet.
Some residents have asked how the fiber will be installed and what members can expect to see as the work unfolds. Below are some photos that explain the process, along with an example of a utility company marking its lines. As mentioned in previous Landings Association emails, advance crews have been marking utilities with paint and flags. This allows the subsequent boring crews to know where utilities are located when they install the conduit that will hold the new fiber. Please do not remove the flags. The crews will remove the flags when work is completed.
Access holes are dug approximately every 10 feet. This allows workers to guide the missile borer and helps locate items like irrigation systems that otherwise might not be marked.
Sod and dirt are set aside on a tarp to restore the landscaping after work is completed. In the second photo, you can see the white pipes of an irrigation system that were located and will be marked.
Pictured is the compressor to run the missile borer. A larger, directional borer will be used where appropriate on main thoroughfares.
Shown is the missile borer coming through the hole and being guided to the next hole.
Orange conduit is pulled through the hole created by the missile borer. It has a tracer wire with it for later locates as needed. Then, fiber cable will be “blown” through the conduit.
Shown is a junction box that will be installed flush to the ground. There is basically one box between each home. When homeowners sign up, crews can pull fiber from these boxes.
These two photos show a splicing vault, where conduit from different runs will terminate, allowing the fiber to be connected. The vault has rocks inside to allow for better drainage.
It is important that all utilities are located before work begins to avoid disruptions. This photo shows Utilities, Inc. of Georgia employees using ground penetrating radar and a pole to help find and mark its water lines.
This article was originally published by The Landings Association on their website. Visit landings.org to read the original article. https://landings.org/news/2024/02/01/internet-installation-update-february-1-2024
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