Telstra Endeavour

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Telstra Endeavour
Cable type Fibre-optic
Fate Active
First traffic October 2008
Design capacity 1.28 tbit/s
Lit capacity 80 gbit/s
Built by Alcatel-Lucent
Landing points Tamarama Beach, New South Wales
Wai'anae, Hawai'i
Area served Asia-Pacific
Owner(s) Telstra
Website Telstra Endeavour Cable

The Telstra Endeavour is a submarine cable connecting Sydney and Hawaii. The cable went live in October 2008,[1] with a capacity of 1.28 terabits per second in the future (currently at 80 gigabits per second.) It was proposed[2][3] on 28 March 2007 by Telstra, the largest telecommunications carrier in Australia.

Landing points

The landing points are:[4]

History

Telstra announced that the cable would connect Sydney and Hawaii with a 9,000 km link, the largest ever built and owned by an Australian company, providing a transmission capacity of 1.28 terabit/s to Hawaii. The cable will be linked to others from Hawaii to the US mainland.

The manufacture and laying of the cable was the responsibility of Alcatel-Lucent, which also supplied Telstra's two cables across Bass Strait and its Tasman Sea (TASMAN 2) cable. Alcatel-Lucent is basing this turn-key project[5] on the "Alcatel 1620 Light Manager"[1] Submarine Line Termination Equipment that uses Dense Wavelength-division Multiplexing (DWDM). No cost was revealed, however it is estimated around $300 million (AUD).

See also

References

  1. http://www.commsday.com/node/743 Telstra doubling lit capacity on Endeavour Hawaii cable
  2. Telstra Media Release, "Telstra continues aggressive investment with Australia to USA connection", 28 March 2007
  3. Rossi, Sandra, "Telstra unveils largest submarine cable connection to US – 9000km from Sydney to Hawaii", Computerworld, 29 March 2007
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Alcatel-Lucent media release Telstra awards Alcatel-Lucent 9,000 km submarine network contract to support IP network transformation strategy, Paris, 28 March 2007

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