Silicon Line to Double Production Capacity of Key Components Used in Optical Cables for HDMI and Other Connectivity Standards
Silicon Line GmbH (www.silicon-line.com), the global leader in developing and providing innovative optical link technology for consumer, commercial and industrial electronics, announced it is doubling the capacity of its manufacturing facility in Hasselt, Belgium.
The factory produces the company's patented "optical engines" used in making active optical cables for devices using HDMI, DisplayPort and USB3 connections. The expansion, within its existing facility, is already underway and will be completed during the first quarter of the year. Employment at the factory will increase 30 percent.
"We need this expansion for the introduction of a family of module products for HDMI, DisplayPort, USB3 and custom VR applications and to meet demand resulting from the new HDMI 2.1 specification," said Ruud van Linden, CEO, Silicon Line. "We will be able to produce optical engines and cable modules to make millions of cables annually."
Cable modules house the optical engine and other components inside cable-end connectors. Two modules, one at each end, are required for every cable. Silicon Line's optical engines simplify coupling of light into the fiber, greatly reducing material and production costs of optical cables to allow affordable consumer pricing.
"The company may look to expand factory capacity again next year as demand and consumer applications for high bandwidth cables continues to grow," said van der Linden.
The Hasselt factory is the only facility where the company's optical engines are produced. In addition to active optical link technology for consumer products, the company is also developing optical engines and customized cable modules for commercial and industrial applications.
The increasing bandwidth requirements of new and evolving connectivity standards, especially HDMI, DisplayPort and USB3, are driving cable makers to use optical fiber instead of copper for the interconnect cables needed, for example, to connect a video game console, computer or set-top box to a TV. The longer the length of cable required, the more likely it is that optical cables will be used.
Silicon Line is demonstrating a prototype of the world's first active optical cable for HDMI 2.1 at the 2019 Consumer Electronics Show, Las Vegas Convention Center South Hall in the HDMI Licensing Administrator exhibit, booth 20208