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I understand all of that.  Water vapor will penetrate the walls of the 
conduit and condense inside, or as you say, get inside via air flow 
through the conduit.  But why is that a problem for the Heliax inside 
the conduit?  Assuming the conduit is below the frost line, of course. 
73,
Dave   AB7E
On 7/25/2020 6:01 AM, jimlux wrote:
 
On 7/25/20 5:41 AM, jimlux wrote:
 
Daily temperature fluctuations cause air to move in and out of the 
conduit - that's where the condensation comes from.  Unless you live 
where the dew point never goes below the soil temperature, water will 
accumulate.  Barometric pressure variations do the same thing, but a 
lesser effect. Wind causing a small pressure differential between the 
two ends also pushes air through the conduit.  You'll see this when 
one end is outside and another is inside a building, especially if 
the building has HVAC with outside air input. 
One way I've heard of, but have not seen in person, to fix this is to 
run sufficient DC or AC current through the coax to make it slightly 
warmer.  This sounds like one of those ideas that might work, but 
then, it's hard to calculate that it will, and if you've got a 
commercial installation, you're more likely to go with something 
tried and true (fans, nitrogen purge, etc.). Or in a broadcast 
environment where there's significant power flowing through the coax 
24/7. 
Someone probably tried it in the 30s or 40s, but it didn't work "well 
enough" 
Running power through an antenna to melt the ice off.. that's been 
done a lot - the big Canadian SW broadcast station at the north end 
of the Bay of Fundy on the border between Nova Scotia and New 
Brunswick did that. Resistive heaters on dishes is also a standard thing.
 
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