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As with all of my external cable connections (excluding mobile
installs), I use good quality plugs that physically screw together. The when I am finished, I use self amalgamating tape (costs about $20 Aust per roll) which provides a weatherproof seal around the connection - have cut the tape off plugs which I have done ten or more years previously to find them as dry as the day I put them together. On top of the self amalgamating tape, I use the normal electrical tape to give the birds something to peck at before they reach the self amalgamating tape (bloody cockies can be ferocious with antennas and coaxial cable here). I believe that the only way that coax is going to become water effected is if it directly exposed to water (i.e. rain), and once you have put the connector on the end of the cable, screwed it into the antenna and taped it up, the chances of water getting into it are very remote (bar the outer layer being cracked, cut or abraded). In my opinion, pressurising the cable is not something that is needed for the average hobbyist. Matt Dave Woolf wrote in message ... Just wonder what other's might do to keep moisture from getting into the semi-hollow 9913 type low loss coax. It would seem inevitiable with changes in temperature and pressure that moist air would eventually work its way into the coax and then condense. I had a fellow ham that took the precaution of pressurizing this type of coax to maintain positive pressure and keep out outside air. Seemed like a lot of effort but maybe it is necessary. I have tried to seal the ends of the coax with silicone sealant but I am not really sure that this has been effective in the long term. What do others do? What has been your experience? Dave - K8RSP (to reply to me directly remove NOSPAM from above address) |
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