I'd have pushed the coax into the 6 foot 1/2" PVC pipe. Then I'd have
inserted the PVC into the hole under the eves and into the attic. From the
attic I'd have retrieved the end of the 1/2" PVC and slipped it off the
coax. Thus, ending up with the coax in my hand and ready to pull and feed
into the conduit. Not sure that the hole under the eves would have allowed
1/2" clearance - but might have worked. Just a variation on your theme.
Roger, KL7Q
"Ken Scharf" wrote in message
. ..
Every now and then a need for a tool not on hand occurs, or
a required part isn't available for a repair. Then the
proverbal light bulb appears over one's head (homage to
Edison no doubt). Today I was running some RG8/U into my
attic crawl space to access a conduit into my shack. I drilled
a hole into the roof overhang and pushed the cable into the
hole. As Murphy would have it, the end of the cable being pushed
into the hole was the end wound onto the core of the spool, so the
cable was very 'springy' resulting in it all bunching up right
at the hole inside the attic. When I climbed into the attic
I couldn't reach the cable, it was sitting in a coiled up bunch
at the wall. No way I was going to be able to crawl the distance
and reach out to grab the cable.
Now for the macgyverism ....
I found a 6 foot piece of left over 1/2 pvc pipe and a 3" U-bolt.
I attached the u bolt to the end of the pipe with electrical tape
and used the new tool to reach and hook the coax.
Ok, I'm sure we've all come up with these macgyverism's from time
to time. Anybody care to share their brainstorms...?
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