There isn’t really a difference between a splitter on a GPON system and a splitter on an XGSPON system, in fact GPON/XGSPON can coexist on the same fibre/splitter network…but XGSPON has the option to go upto a 256 to 1 split , and has an operating range ( distance ) of around 100km, compared to GPON max split of 128 (typically 32/1 is used ) and around 60km…speeds.
For Openreach there isn't a xgs or 25g pon or gpon splitter. As you correctly said, XGSpon can do 256 way compared to 128 for gpon. You can of course add a splitter further back up the path, so that you can split it into 2 or 4 (64 or 128) but of course you reduce the length that light will travel.
That aside, I dobut many would 64 or 128 user splits on gpon. City fibre is going from gpon to xgs pon, so i suspect the contention will stay the same
A 1/32 splitter is basically 5 x 1 to 2 optical splits contained within in a single device, built as 1 input to 2 outputs , 2 to 4 outputs , 4 to 8 , 8 to 16 , 16 inputs to 32 outputs , each internal split is a 3bB loss so 15dB overall loss for the device, to get to more than 32 outputs obviously needs more splits , a 1/4 split then 4 x 1/32 splitters hanging on each of those 4 output fibres gives potentially 128 customers , this is possible on GPON , but Openreach don’t do it .
When it comes to XGPON and XGSPON , a 1 to 8 split with 8 x1/32 splits gives 256 users , Alt Nets may do this on their XGPON and XGSPON systems because it is one of the major design benefits of these systems, if it can be done , it would be daft not to use at least some of this benefit when designing a network, but I’ve no knowledge what split ratio any particular Alt Nets uses, perhaps not 256 per PON , but 64 or 128 seems likely.
Edited by Iniltous (Sat 14-Jun-25 23:37:53)



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