Difference Between DR and FR in Optical Transceivers

DR (Direct Reach) and FR (Far Reach) are commonly used terms in Ethernet optical transceivers, referring to different types of transmission distances and implementations.

FeatureDR (Direct Reach)FR (Far Reach)
DefinitionDirectly modulated laser (DML) transceiver for shorter reachUses externally modulated laser (EML) for longer reach
Transmission DistanceTypically up to 500m (for DR4)Typically up to 2km (for FR4)
Number of LanesDR4: 4 lanes, DR1: 1 laneFR4: 4 lanes (MUX to 1 fiber pair)
WavelengthsUses a single wavelength per lane (e.g., 1310nm)Uses CWDM4 wavelengths (1271nm, 1291nm, 1311nm, 1331nm)
MultiplexingNo WDM, uses parallel fibers (e.g., 4-fiber MPO)Uses Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) to combine 4 channels into 1 fiber pair
Typical ApplicationsShort-range, intra-datacenter connectionsLonger-range datacenter interconnects
Example Standards400G DR4 (500m)400G FR4 (2km)

Key Takeaways

  1. DR (Direct Reach) is used for shorter-distance links, usually within a single data center.
  2. FR (Far Reach) is used for longer data center interconnects (DCI) or campus networks.
  3. FR uses WDM technology to reduce fiber count, whereas DR uses parallel fiber connections.