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Re: Topband: underground cables question

Subject: Re: Topband: underground cables question
From: Dale Putnam <daleputnam@hotmail.com>
Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2017 15:12:45 +0000
List-post: <mailto:topband@contesting.com>
must have to do with the annual rainfall.

I too come from 30+ years in telco and radio comm. There are 12 runs of 6 in 
conduit between building on one campus, and a number of others around that are 
still dry after being there for 20+ years. And the conduit, I am speaking of is 
PVC TUBE..   pretty much the same stuff that carries the water into your house. 
IF someone wants to use emt conduit, then that is the description that Guy so 
aptly describes. NOT a good deal. AND it isn't rated for water per code in the 
electrical code either. I have seen where squirrels somehow managed to work the 
metal conduit hard enough with the weather helping, to access the coax inside.. 
they didn't much like the sticky goo inside.. but that didn't stop them from 
eating enough to short the coax..   and of course Muphy made it an intermittent 
short.


Have a great day,
--... ...-- Dale - WC7S in Wy

"Actions speak louder than words"
1856 - Abraham Lincoln


________________________________
From: guyk2av@gmail.com <guyk2av@gmail.com> on behalf of Guy Olinger K2AV 
<k2av.guy@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2017 8:12 AM
To: Dale Putnam
Cc: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Re: Topband: underground cables question

Coming from an ancient Telco background which included keeping microwave 
waveguides dry for AT&T, unless you are willing to pressurize the conduit at 
one end and allow air to exit at the other, AND insure that the air is dry 
enough to not condensate at your coldest possible ground temperature, or run it 
with an unbroken slope to a point where water drains without pumping and or can 
be suctioned, then make these assumptions:

1) Permanent performance and very long life is desired and outweighs cost. If 
you move a lot and are putting up stuff at rental housing you probably need not 
worry. Just remember to start with new coax and cable at the new rental place. 
Throw away the old stuff. Then mark this read and move on to the next posting. 
If you think you are retiring at your place of residence, and if lucky want it 
to work without a worry for the next 30 years absent direct lightning strike, 
then read on.

2) All conduits will fill with water. That is their NATURAL state unless you 
specifically and effectively mitigate it. At any time other than first 
installed, filled with water is their most probable state.

This leaves the main usefulnesses of the conduit as

a) Critter protection, and

b) Cable replacement, if the conduit is large enough and water-proof pull ropes 
are left in conduit,  a method of adding or replacing cables that avoids 
redigging and leaving deprecated cable in the ground. These are significant 
long-term advantages, and many find those more than enough reason to use them. 
However.......

3) Even in conduit all cables must have permanent, water-proof jacketing. Most 
cable has jacketing that is not rated for permanent submersion, meant for 
indoor use.

Polyethelyne (PE) jacketed or hardline cable is really the only commonly 
available choice for coax with portions permanently submerged. Flooded is nice, 
but probably overkill INSIDE CONDUIT if the jacketing is PE or other 
permanently waterproof material. ***RG213 does NOT conform.*** Any 
miscellaneous plastics do not conform. There are cables manufactured with 
ham-uncommon materials to telephone company specifications, FOR DELIVERY TO 
TELCO, that have all the water stuff worked out just fine. But BEWARE knockoffs 
and batches for retail that mfr knows will never be sample tested by telco. Or 
for that matter cable that failed telco tests and was put on the retail market 
to recover costs.

High current rotator motor leads (as opposed to control leads) should use the 
commonly available UG series direct-buriable power wiring available at home 
improvement stores. Less voltage drop, permanent and rated for wet environments.

4) splices or cable terminations should be made indoors and elevated where 
waterproofing failure will not allow water to get inside the PE jacketing. Some 
manufactured multiconductor cables will have BOTH external and internal 
insulation PE or teflon. Do not locate splices in conduit. You're just asking 
for it. Even if 9 out of 10 get away with it, be assured you will be # 10. 
Murphy KNOWS all you've done, knows all the contest and DXpedition dates, AND 
has a malevolent nature.

73, Guy K2AV


On Thu, Oct 5, 2017 at 8:49 AM, Dale Putnam 
<daleputnam@hotmail.com<mailto:daleputnam@hotmail.com>> wrote:
I agree with Ken, with only one option, and that would be if the conduit is 
open on both ends.. allowing free air flow thru. That situation, MAY help dry 
the water from sitting on the cable, depending on the average humidity at the 
underground temp. Warm air from inside.. to cold air outside may not work out 
well either.



Have a great day,
--... ...-- Dale - WC7S in Wy

"Actions speak louder than words"
1856 - Abraham Lincoln


________________________________
From: Topband 
<topband-bounces@contesting.com<mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com>> on 
behalf of Ken Claerbout <k4zw@verizon.net<mailto:k4zw@verizon.net>>
Sent: Thursday, October 5, 2017 6:19 AM
To: topband@contesting.com<mailto:topband@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: Topband: underground cables question

As you have found out, it's impossible to keep water out of a conduit like 
that.  I use direct bury cabling and put it directly in the ground.  Granted 
the cable is flooded, but putting in back in the conduit ensures it will sit in 
some water, something I would try to avoid.

73
Ken K4ZW


-----Original Message-----
From: John 
<beaumonts@beaumonts.karoo.co.uk<mailto:beaumonts@beaumonts.karoo.co.uk>>
To: topband <topband@contesting.com<mailto:topband@contesting.com>>
Sent: Thu, Oct 5, 2017 4:11 am
Subject: Topband: underground cables question

Hi all, some  years ago I buried a 4 inch conduit about a foot deep in my field 
, inside I run a control wire and a coax line RG213 to a 160 m vertical the 
feeder was a total of 5/4 wavelength long about half of it in the conduit, it 
was used as one line for a pair of verticals spaced 5/8 wave apart. When first 
installed it worked very good but after a while I noticed it dropped off and I 
suspected water ingress. An insulation test with 1000v from my electricians 
test equipment showed indeed a fall in insulation resistance.

So my question is I have a couple of large reels of commscope F1160 BEF flooded 
75 ohm
do you think I could put it in the same conduit which has allowed some water in 
or would you make alternative arrangements . I realise it a direct bury coax 
but appreciate advice.

I wish to get the two verticals going again will use 1 X 3/4 line above ground 
1x5/4 line part in conduit and a 1/2 wave to switch in and out above ground.

regards


John Beaumont
G4EIM


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