In the summer here 85%, or more at 80 to over 90F is not uncommon. So
that's a lot more water, but the outside ends of the conduit are inside
sealed NEMA boxes. The coax comes out at the tower, either through
bulkhead connector or fittings that seal against the coax jackets or
control cables. The same at the house and shop ends.
Depending on open conduit ends (assuming they point down) and wind
direction, the wind can cause pressure or suction from blowing across
the open end.
73
Roger (K8RI)
On 1/30/2016 Saturday 8:35 PM, jimlux wrote:
I did a bit of calculating about what might push damp air into a conduit.
I assumed that I had 30 meters (100ft) of a 2" diameter tube where
there was a pressure difference corresponding to a 10 mi/hr wind (it's
about 1/4 lb/sq ft)
You'd get a flow of about 2 liters/second (which is surprisingly high)
In an hour, then you'd have 7200 liters. If you had 100% humidity air
at 68F (20C) going in, and the soil was at 50F (10C), you'd be
condensing out about 50 grams/hour.
In reality, you probably don't have 100% humidity at 68F. But you
might have 50% humidity at 85F, and that's about the same amount of
water.
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73
Roger (K8RI)
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