SR (Short Reach) and LR (Long Reach) are optical designations commonly used across various module types (such as SFP+/SFP28, QSFP/QSFP28). They are not brand-specific; they are industry conventions that help communicate intended transmission reach. SFP+ SR, LR, and ER modules are the cornerstone of 10G fiber optic networking. Understanding the basic differences between each module is important to prevent an expensive misconfiguration and provide you with the best network. Some of the major abbreviations are SR, LR, LRM, ER, and ZR. SFP-10G-SR vs SFP-10G-LR vs SFP-10G-LRM vs SFP-10G-ER vs SFP-10G- ZR is the most common scene abbreviations in. SR LR are shorthand labels used on optical transceivers to indicate a “reach class” — in other words, the link distance the module is designed for under standard conditions. SR, LRM, LR represent the transmission distance of the 10G optical module. The transmission distance they represent is from short to. SFP+ stands for Small Form-factor Pluggable Plus, and the “plus” (+) indicates that it can handle speeds of up to 10 Gigabits per second (10G).
[PDF Version]