Standard trunks bundle multiple 8, 12, or 16-fiber sub-units within a single jacket, enabling massive fiber counts—ranging from 12 to 144 fibers or more—to be routed in a remarkably small diameter. During installation, trunks form the permanent or semi-permanent link between. OptoTrunk Cables combine multiple cables into one, using high-density connectors like 144F Expanded Beam Optical (EBO) and LC cartridges to enable efficient, space-saving connectivity. Data centers face increasing demands for bandwidth and signal integrity. OptoTrunk Cables consolidate multiple. What is a Trunk Cable, and How Does it Work? A trunk cable is a type of fiber optic cable that can carry large amounts of data at once through a telecommunications system. It acts as the “backbone” or main line of communication within a network, connecting different areas together while preserving. MPO trunk multifiber cable assemblies facilitate rapid deployment of high density backbone cabling in data centers and other high fiber environments, reducing network installation or reconfiguration time and cost. They are used to interconnect cassettes, panels or ruggedized MPO fanouts, spanning. As enterprise and hyperscale data centers scale rapidly to support 800G and 1. This guide provides a systematic introduction to MPO Trunk. Rosenberger OSI introduced high-fiber-count factory assembled fiber optic trunk cables based on loose tube indoor, universal and outdoor cables to the market in 1991.