[Boatanchors] remote antenna conduit?

David Knepper collinsradio at comcast.net
Mon Sep 9 04:11:14 EDT 2013


I use plastic pipe obtained at Home Depot or Lowes.


David Knepper - W3CRA/W3ST
Collins Radio Association
www.collinsra.com
Join the CRA today
-----Original Message----- 
From: W4AWM at aol.com
Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2013 10:16 PM
To: w2hx at w2hx.com ; mrca at mailman.qth.net ; boatanchors at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Boatanchors] remote antenna conduit?

Hi Eugene,

You have some good thoughts for a difficult problem.  I have just gone
through some of that on a miniature scale.

My personal feeling is that you should have as few connections as  possible
in an outdoor setting, even with a water proof box.

One thing you might think about if you just want connectors on both ends is
to take the cable out to the antenna, cut the connector off one end and
pull the  free end back to the shack. Then you can solder a connector back 
on
in a  controlled environment.

Don't forget to run a "pull line" through the conduit to make pulling
additional cables through easy at a later date. Pull lines are available at 
your
local home supply store in the electrical department.  They are very hardy
and will not break easily.

I would use the largest diameter conduit you can afford to allow for future
expansion. I'd avoid flexible conduit if possible. It is more expensive
than  rigid conduit and the rough ribbed inside makes pulling lines through
more  difficult.

At my vacation QTH, I just ran separate rigid conduits out to a shed  some
80 feet from the cabin. Through a 2" conduit, I pulled 4 #4 copper
conductors for AC. Through a second 1.5" conduit, I pulled the following:
2 RG-58/U, 1 RG-8X, 2 #22 quad telephone lines, 1 #14 quad speaker line, 1
#22 6 pair line and 1 #18 twisted pair (burglar alarm).  There was a  pull
line installed in each conduit. The pull was very easy with a snake and a
second person to feed the lines from the far end. There were two 90  degree
sections in each conduit run.

If you have any difficulty, wire pulling lubricant is available from the
above source.

Take care and have fun.

73,

John,  W4AWM


In a message dated 9/8/2013 9:30:08 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
w2hx at w2hx.com writes:

Hello  all,

As part of building a new shack, I am taking this opportunity to  run some
conduit from the shack out to the backyard for a vertical antenna  hidden
amongst the trees.  In addition to coax, I'll need to run a  coupler control
cable. I will either run my Mackay tuner out there or my  sunair 1KW tuner
out there. Both of these tuners have an existing cable with  the circular
MS-style connectors on the ends.

Here's the question. When  you guys run antenna cables out to your
antennas, what size conduit do you  use? I ask because the antenna coupler
connectors are something like 2" in  diameter! So I would imagine I would 
need a 3"
diameter conduit which isn't  cheap (I am thinking of using flexible PVC).

OR: Do you guys run the  cable first, then bring the soldering iron up to
the antenna site and solder  on the connector there? A lot of work to do in
an uncontrolled environment but  would allow a 2" conduit to be installed
since the connector doesn't need to  be fished through it (it would be 
soldered
on after the cable  emerges).

What do you guys do?

One other possible idea.   Take the existing cable with connectors on both
ends, and cut off say 3 feet  from the antenna end. Then I have one long
cable with no connector that will  end near the antenna. I could then use a
weather proof box with a barrier  strip inside and connect each of the wires 
in
the control cable to this  barrier strip. Then take the 3 foot piece of
cable with the other connector  and again attached the wires from the cut 
side
to this same barrier  strip.

Thoughts?


73 Eugene  W2HX




______________________________________________________________
Boatanchors mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/boatanchors
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:Boatanchors at mailman.qth.net

List Administrator: Duane Fischer, W8DBF
** For Assistance: dfischer at usol.com **


This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html 



More information about the Boatanchors mailing list