OM3 and OM4 fibers are backward compatible. Connectors, transceivers, and equipment designed for one will generally work with the other, provided all components use the same core size (50/125 µm). However, the overall performance will be limited to the lowest-rated component in. The answer is yes—OM3 and OM4 are fully compatible because both use the same 50/125 µm multimode fiber structure and support identical connector types such as LC, SC, and MPO/MTP. However, there is an important rule in fiber optic network design: When different fiber grades are mixed in a single. Most multimode fiber types used today are OM3/OM4 and OM5, but there are still older network infrastructures, where cables inside buildings were laid a long time ago that use OM1, OM2 multimode fiber. Performance depends on the lowest grade. OM4 is best for 10G–100G, OM5 supports SWDM. Can I connect OS2 to OM3/OM4? ❌ No — core size mismatch causes signal loss. It is worth noting that OM4 cable can support higher transmission rates, but to enjoy the benefits, your equipment must be OM4-compatible.
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