ODIN (cable system)

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ODIN-Map.png

ODIN was a submarine telecommunications cable system linking the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.

It was 1040 km in length and used Synchronous Digital Hierarchy technology and had two 2.5Gbit/s lines (One active and one redundant) and can simultaneously carry 30,000 telephone calls. It was built in 3 segments (Segment 1: Netherlands - Denmark, segment 2: Denmark - Norway, Segment 3: Norway - Sweden[1]) and the project cost DKK 480m (Approx. €64.5m).

It had landing points in:

  1. Alkmaar, Netherlands
  2. , Denmark
  3. Blåbjerg, Denmark
  4. Kristiansand, Norway
  5. Lysekil, Sweden

The segment between Måde and Blåbjerg was overland (shown in blue).

ODIN Seg1 is out of service since 1 January 2007.

Segment 3 is out of service since approximately 22 April 2008.[2]

The last segment was taken out of service before January 2009.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Study of Unrepeatered Submarine Fiber Optic System, p. 190, at Google Books
  2. ^ http://sjofartsverket.se/upload/Ufs/2008/Nr%20205.pdf, Notice to Mariners #250, 2008-04-23, The Swedish Maritime Administration
  3. ^ http://www.jydskdyk.dk/HTML/News/2009/recovery.htm Archived 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine, JD-Contractor A/S, January 2009 press release on cable recovery contract.

External links[]

  • "Tele Danmark to take part in international cable project". Retrieved February 5, 2006.[dead link]
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