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#11
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Isn't the LMR400 rated for direct burial? Certainly there are varieties of
RG8 that are. If you don't use a conduit type thing, you do not have to worry about water accumulation, because the cable and ground will eventually dry out between rain storms, unless you bury it deep. Tam/WB2TT "yea right" wrote in message news ![]() I would like to bury my coax for a distance of about 20ft. The location consist of 6" of crushed decorative rocks over the top of very rocky soil. I intend to take the LMR-400 coax and push it through a garden hose to add a layer of protection. However, I am worried that condensation will quickly fill the airspace of the hose with water and it will either penetrate the coax outer jacket or interfere with the performance of it in some unknown negative way. I can not flood the garden hose with petroleum oil as it will soon eat through the PVC jacket of the coax or garden hose. Ideally, I would like to flood the hose with the same stuff they put into underground cables. It has a honey consistency and is not easily displaced by water. I was hoping for some type of silicon oil but am unable to find anything similar at the hardware store. Anybody have any suggestions? |
#12
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On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 21:18:02 GMT, helmsman
wrote: yea right wrote: I would like to bury my coax for a distance of about 20ft. The location consist of 6" of crushed decorative rocks over the top of very rocky soil. SNIP Anybody have any suggestions? I can't find the original post, and going to Google to get it would be starting another thread, soooo,,,, I'm just going to insert here. The answer is one of those , "It all depends" on what you want for reliability. It also depends on whether you will have any connections underground. OTOH, connections underground are little different than connections above ground. They should be treated the same. Crushed rock and very rocky soil are about the worst location for burying coax. PVC conduit is *cheap*, or at least relatively inexpensive, particularly if you are only going to have one run of coax. I have 7 coax cables 3 TV RG-6 cables, two rotor cables, a power cable tot he 2-meter preamp and some other assorted *stuff* run through mine. I use a 75 foot run of 4 inch PVC to a junction box on the tower.. http://www.rogerhalstead.com/cablebox.htm Go to the hardware and get a tube of silicon sealant and seal the ends, if you don't think that's enough seal one end and shoot nitrogen gas in the hose to displace the air and then seal it quickly. A point or two here...If you want to force N2 through the coax you need *both* ends open. However it *will* breathe as pressure changes with temperature. Do NOT seal both ends of a coax run. Do the best possible job up on top and leave the end in the house unsealed. IF you seal both ends the pressure will eventually equalize. Then with each temperature change it will either pressurize, or draw a vacuum. This will eventually draw in moisture. I use heat shrink tubing on top of the tower and fill the connectors with DC-4 silicon grease. This works at least up through 440 and for all legal amateur power levels. SPLICES: The easiest and surest way to seal a splice from the weather is to go to your local electrical supply house and purchase a length of 3M (TM) 0800 IMCSN .80/.22 20/5/6mm flooded heat shrink tube for RG-8 size cables. The stuff is *about* $10 for a 40 inch length. It is coated inside with something akin to hot melt glue. It not only does a tremendous job of weatherproofing, but adds mechanical strength as well. Don't be cheap and expect to reuse the connectors although you might get lucky and be able to do so. "Unshrunk" the tubing will easily fit *over* a PL250, or N connector. That .8 indicates the inside diameter prior to shrinking. It will shrink all the way to 0.22 inches. Make your splice using either a male to female connection, or two males with a barrel connector in between. Slip a length of the heat shrink tubing long enough cover the entire splice and extend at least 1 1/2 to 2 inches beyond the connectors onto the coax jacket. When applying heat to shrink the tube onto the splice be sure and start in the middle and work outward. IF you start on the ends it will look like a snake that just swallowed a very big frog by the time you get any where near the center:-)) This method does a far neater and better job than coax seal and tape. Less mess, adds strength, and is as waterproof as you are going to get. It has the drawback of requiring a heat gun to shrink the tubing (which sometimes means a very long extension cord, but I use them on top of a 97 foot tower), nor will it fill a hole where coax passes through like coax seal. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Have a good day:') . Don't buy goods made in France or Germany and vacation somewhere else! |
#13
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Hello....
Yikes what a big production. 15 years ago I had had two antennas roughly 100ft away from the rig and I buried both coax cables with no issues. One was Radio Shack/Tandy 8U the other was made by Carol Cable Co (Again 8U). The coax was average to low quality and it lasted with no change in SWR or performance until the day I moved out 10 years later. It probably is still there and would likely work! If you are still worried go to Revy or Totem and purchase some platic PVC conduit and run the cable through that. Stay away from goose greese or whatever else they are suggesting you spread on your coax, what a mess it would be...... Yuk... Homac Roger Halstead wrote in message . .. On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 21:18:02 GMT, helmsman wrote: yea right wrote: I would like to bury my coax for a distance of about 20ft. The location consist of 6" of crushed decorative rocks over the top of very rocky soil. SNIP Anybody have any suggestions? I can't find the original post, and going to Google to get it would be starting another thread, soooo,,,, I'm just going to insert here. The answer is one of those , "It all depends" on what you want for reliability. It also depends on whether you will have any connections underground. OTOH, connections underground are little different than connections above ground. They should be treated the same. Crushed rock and very rocky soil are about the worst location for burying coax. PVC conduit is *cheap*, or at least relatively inexpensive, particularly if you are only going to have one run of coax. I have 7 coax cables 3 TV RG-6 cables, two rotor cables, a power cable tot he 2-meter preamp and some other assorted *stuff* run through mine. I use a 75 foot run of 4 inch PVC to a junction box on the tower.. http://www.rogerhalstead.com/cablebox.htm Go to the hardware and get a tube of silicon sealant and seal the ends, if you don't think that's enough seal one end and shoot nitrogen gas in the hose to displace the air and then seal it quickly. A point or two here...If you want to force N2 through the coax you need *both* ends open. However it *will* breathe as pressure changes with temperature. Do NOT seal both ends of a coax run. Do the best possible job up on top and leave the end in the house unsealed. IF you seal both ends the pressure will eventually equalize. Then with each temperature change it will either pressurize, or draw a vacuum. This will eventually draw in moisture. I use heat shrink tubing on top of the tower and fill the connectors with DC-4 silicon grease. This works at least up through 440 and for all legal amateur power levels. SPLICES: The easiest and surest way to seal a splice from the weather is to go to your local electrical supply house and purchase a length of 3M (TM) 0800 IMCSN .80/.22 20/5/6mm flooded heat shrink tube for RG-8 size cables. The stuff is *about* $10 for a 40 inch length. It is coated inside with something akin to hot melt glue. It not only does a tremendous job of weatherproofing, but adds mechanical strength as well. Don't be cheap and expect to reuse the connectors although you might get lucky and be able to do so. "Unshrunk" the tubing will easily fit *over* a PL250, or N connector. That .8 indicates the inside diameter prior to shrinking. It will shrink all the way to 0.22 inches. Make your splice using either a male to female connection, or two males with a barrel connector in between. Slip a length of the heat shrink tubing long enough cover the entire splice and extend at least 1 1/2 to 2 inches beyond the connectors onto the coax jacket. When applying heat to shrink the tube onto the splice be sure and start in the middle and work outward. IF you start on the ends it will look like a snake that just swallowed a very big frog by the time you get any where near the center:-)) This method does a far neater and better job than coax seal and tape. Less mess, adds strength, and is as waterproof as you are going to get. It has the drawback of requiring a heat gun to shrink the tubing (which sometimes means a very long extension cord, but I use them on top of a 97 foot tower), nor will it fill a hole where coax passes through like coax seal. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Have a good day:') . Don't buy goods made in France or Germany and vacation somewhere else! |
#14
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![]() Thierry, Please remove me from your 'art' list. 'Doc |
#15
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On Sun, 19 Oct 2003 19:01:38 GMT, Roger Halstead
wrote: On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 21:18:02 GMT, helmsman wrote: yea right wrote: I would like to bury my coax for a distance of about 20ft. The location consist of 6" of crushed decorative rocks over the top of very rocky soil. BTW, in the case of sand, or clay with out stones, I just bury plain old coax directly and have never had a problem doing that. Here that just doesn't work. Particularly when the tower system usually gets hit by lightening about 3 times a Summer. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) |
#16
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On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 20:39:15 GMT, yea right wrote:
First, after all this thread, this, the original post, turned up on my server today Oct 21st, but dated the 18th. I would like to bury my coax for a distance of about 20ft. The location consist of 6" of crushed decorative rocks over the top of very rocky soil. I intend to take the LMR-400 coax and push it through a garden hose to add a layer of protection. However, I am worried that condensation will Don't worry about it...LMR-400 hangs out in the rain, it'll survive inside a garden hose full of water. quickly fill the airspace of the hose with water and it will either penetrate the coax outer jacket or interfere with the performance of it in some unknown negative way. Just don't have any unprotected connectors inside the hose. Probably the best would be to drill a number of holes at 90 degrees to each other along the length of the hose so it can drain. (before ins talling the coax G)The hose only serves as a mechanical protector. I can not flood the garden hose with petroleum oil as it will soon eat through the PVC jacket of the coax or garden hose. Ideally, I would like Don't worry about it. It's not worth the effort and eventually the work to clean it up. to flood the hose with the same stuff they put into underground cables. It has a honey consistency and is not easily displaced by water. I was hoping for some type of silicon oil but am unable to find anything similar at the hardware store. We used to use silicon oil, but you really shouldn't be worried about it. You might need to use some wire pulling soap (the gooey yellow stuff) to push the LMR-400 through, but the stuff is stiff enough I would expect it to go through fine. It t takes a good can to two cans to get a cable through my 4 inch conduit now that it has so many cables in it. The yellow stuff is easy to clean up Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Anybody have any suggestions? |
#17
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![]() "Roger Halstead" wrote in message ... On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 20:39:15 GMT, yea right wrote: You might need to use some wire pulling soap (the gooey yellow stuff) to push the LMR-400 through, but the stuff is stiff enough I would expect it to go through fine. It t takes a good can to two cans to get a cable through my 4 inch conduit now that it has so many cables in it. The yellow stuff is easy to clean up Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Roger, If you are going to the trouble of using some kind of conduit, and assuming it comes in 10 foot lengths, why not just push it through one piece at a time? That is, push the coax through the pieces of pipe before you join the pipes together. Besides, LMR400 is pretty stiff. Tam/WB2TT |
#18
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On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 21:14:06 -0400, "Tarmo Tammaru"
wrote: "Roger Halstead" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 20:39:15 GMT, yea right wrote: You might need to use some wire pulling soap (the gooey yellow stuff) to push the LMR-400 through, but the stuff is stiff enough I would expect it to go through fine. It t takes a good can to two cans to get a cable through my 4 inch conduit now that it has so many cables in it. The yellow stuff is easy to clean up Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Roger, If you are going to the trouble of using some kind of conduit, and assuming it comes in 10 foot lengths, why not just push it through one piece at a time? That is, push the coax through the pieces of pipe before you join the pipes together. Besides, LMR400 is pretty stiff. In my case I have 75 feet horizontal with two 45 bends at each end and a 3 foot rise at the tower and 86 feet horizontal into the basement. Getting more into that takes lots of soap and one hefty snake and it still gets hung up at times. http://www.rogerhalstead.com/cablebox.htm There are (I'd have to go count to be sure now), 7 runs of LMR 400, 2 runs of RG-6 for the UHF TV antennas, One does everything cable to the C/Ku band dish with rotor and polarization, two 3/8ths inch rotor cable with one used for the rotor and the other for the remote antenna switch. With a single run of LMR 400 in 3/4 inch, I think pushing it through one at a time would work fine. Although for no more than 20 or 30 feet...probably twice that you could easily push one run through the full length. I'd guess you could push it through far longer runs than that. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Tam/WB2TT |
#19
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Roger, just what is that white loamy stuff around the base of your tower
aside from ALL the coax? You need to show us a photo of the tower and what you have hanging on it. It that sand that has blown up, opps, that not sand. Your call tells me your in the northeast. So it must be snnnnnow. I got COLD just looking at it. Have a nice warm day. Marylou, N"5"XXX. Roger Halstead wrote: On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 21:14:06 -0400, "Tarmo Tammaru" wrote: "Roger Halstead" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 20:39:15 GMT, yea right wrote: You might need to use some wire pulling soap (the gooey yellow stuff) to push the LMR-400 through, but the stuff is stiff enough I would expect it to go through fine. It t takes a good can to two cans to get a cable through my 4 inch conduit now that it has so many cables in it. The yellow stuff is easy to clean up Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Roger, If you are going to the trouble of using some kind of conduit, and assuming it comes in 10 foot lengths, why not just push it through one piece at a time? That is, push the coax through the pieces of pipe before you join the pipes together. Besides, LMR400 is pretty stiff. In my case I have 75 feet horizontal with two 45 bends at each end and a 3 foot rise at the tower and 86 feet horizontal into the basement. Getting more into that takes lots of soap and one hefty snake and it still gets hung up at times. http://www.rogerhalstead.com/cablebox.htm There are (I'd have to go count to be sure now), 7 runs of LMR 400, 2 runs of RG-6 for the UHF TV antennas, One does everything cable to the C/Ku band dish with rotor and polarization, two 3/8ths inch rotor cable with one used for the rotor and the other for the remote antenna switch. With a single run of LMR 400 in 3/4 inch, I think pushing it through one at a time would work fine. Although for no more than 20 or 30 feet...probably twice that you could easily push one run through the full length. I'd guess you could push it through far longer runs than that. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) Tam/WB2TT |
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