Electronic – How would one attach an optical fibre to a PCB for a display

ledlight-guidepcb

For a model train layout, I am looking to route a light to a difficult part of the layout – even the 1.6mm LEDs are too big for the area. It is for display, not data communications.

One person has solved the problem on their layout using optical fibre, which seems quite sensible. Rather ingeniously, the light is transferred from an LED the fibre via thimble with a hole drilled in the top.

The fibre does not need to be connected/disconnected from the PCB – a permanent connection is fine.

I am aware of solutions for POF in ethernet, but this is far beyond what I need. I can't be the first one to have this problem since fibre optic trees are cheap and plentiful.

So, some questions:

  • If I have a surface mount LED (or an array thereof), how do I attach an optical fibre to transmit the light for this purpose? I assume there is some sort of plastic mounting I can purchase off-the-shelf.
  • What is the attachment called (i.e. does it have a standard name)?
  • How are they assembled? (e.g. manual, pick and place?)
  • What considerations are there in selecting the type of fibre to use? (it will be no longer than 1m)

(Note to moderators, "optical-fibre" would be a good new tag for this question)

Best Answer

Fiber Optics, as a light source, and not a data transmission platform, is a "shoe-fits" type application. Fiber optic trees use heat shrink or electrical tape or tightly molded plastic as the method of optical coupling.
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Data Transmission Optical Fiber Cable on the other hand, has closely designed standardized connectors, such as TOSLINK for consumer audio connections or SFP (small form-factor pluggable) connector used in some Cisco router Fiber Optic connections.

Using a 5mm or 3mm led with matching heat shrink tubing and enough fiber to fit is very very common in hobbyist modeling applications (which a well done scale model requires much of to look good (Model Enterprise Project)). If you need just a single thin strand, you could drill a hole in a led and hotglue the strand in (Model Train Project).
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Fiber Optics are also used for Star Maps or Star Ceilings (The ends are mushroomed out using a lighter or other heat source, then hot glued in place).
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Commercial applications use Light Pipes made of molded or extruded plastic, to channel a pcb mounted led (almost always smd) to an external case opening. I can't think of a single commercial/consumer/industrial product that would use fiber optic strands as internal light redirecting method, due to how unwieldily that would be in manufacturing, let alone technical support issues as connections are fragile due to the thinness.
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