It began in October 2014, the largest construction project in our company’s history. We built a fiber optic line to almost every house and business within a roughly 2-mile radius of our office in Carnegie. We completed the Carnegie project in 2017. In the years since, we built fiber to every home in Fort Cobb and Mountain View, Oklahoma, as well. We have connected over 1200 customers to our fiber optic network.
The following image gallery shows our progress as the project moved along from construction, testing, cut-over, completion, and removal of the former copper-based facilities.
Travis Ridgeway and Shawn Lucus start the work of tearing down old copper cables in Carnegie
Travis Ridgeway, Henry Autaubo & Byron Clark work to pull a new line to a customer’s house
Matt Smith and Travis Ridgeway are resplicing a fiber optic line for the First Baptist Church in Carnegie
Employee Jimmy Ridgeway prepares to cleave a fiber prior to splicing it.
These huge lengths of fiber optic cable lay on the ground in a giant “figure-8” pattern as our contractors prepare to pull them into a conduit under the highway.
This SpeedTest.net result shows the power of our new fiber optic network. This customer was configured to provide 100 megabits of data upstream and downstream.
USA Construction Co. employees are placing a new cable under Highway 58 as part of our Fiber Optic Network expansion to the north side of the Washita River. Pictured are Tony Roseberry and Grady Peters. (from l-r)
Employees (from left) Jimmy Ridgeway, Travis Ridgeway, and Matt Smith work at splicing a customer’s house into the new fiber network.
Our contractors and employees worked on a warm January day to get a new line hooked up to a customer to bring them ultra-fast internet.
Piecing together new conduits and old lines is part of our massive network upgrade project.
Two miles south of Carnegie, these orange “pipes” (we call them innerduct) prepare to be filled with new fiber optic cables going to customers.
Two feet beneath the ground we laid new conduits to customers that will eventually bring new high-speed fiber internet and other advanced services.
See the connector that’s lit up with the red light? It means the first successful test of a fiber line to a customer. This connection is to the Carnegie Park.
During a directional bore under East Birch Street, our contractors cut into a water line no one knew was there. Workers from the Town of Carnegie work at repairing the line.
This alley behind the Carnegie Nursing Home has a huge trench cut open in order to put the new fiber cables in the ground.
Despite some cold weather and snow, progress continues on our Fiber project in the alley north of Super C Mart.
Workers from USA Construction Company of Oklahoma City begin placing the first new fiber optic lines just north of our office in Carnegie