[Lowfer] receive antenna transmission line maintenance
Douglas D. Williams
kb4oer at gmail.com
Sat Jan 26 10:22:28 EST 2013
Ah, thanks. Wow, hate you had to replace that much coax. Instead of
burying, I've taken to using "lawn staples" from Lowes to pin down the
coax every couple of feet. In the spring/summer the grass quickly
covers it and you can't even see the coax after two or three weeks.
Easier to pull up when replacement time comes.
73, Doug KB4OER
On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 10:03 AM, pbunn <pbunn at matrixei.com> wrote:
> It makes corrosion worse. About a month ago I came in and found the power supply led off on my DC coupler. I figured the power supply had died but when I unplugged the coax it was OK, so then I knew I was looking at a short at the probe or in the coax. Looking at the way the probe circuit works, I didn't see a way a failed transistor could result in a short that low in resistance.
>
> I emailed Jack Smith and asked hid opinion and he said 90 % likely that I had a coax problem and the DC bias would corrode a breach in the shield. After a couple hours with the multimeter, I found a pinhole in a buried section of the Belden quad shield. Just as Jack had indicated, the DC current had caused the aluminum shield to turn to powder for s couple of feet. I ended up replacing the entire 300 foot run with new cable.
>
> Pat
> N4LTA
>
> "Douglas D. Williams" <kb4oer at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Interesting thread. I didn't know any of this.
>
> I wonder if the DC current present on outdoor active antennas helps or
> hinders corrosion?
>
>
> While were on the subject of antenna maintenance, how do you guys
> weatherproof outdoor BNC connections? I've been using this black silly
> putty like substance called "coax seal". It comes in small rolls.
> Works well for weatherproofing, but is difficult and messy to remove
> later on.
>
> 73, Doug KB4OER
>
>
>
> On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 10:27 PM, Michael Sapp <wa3tts at verizon.net> wrote:
>> Stan, W1LE wrote:
>>>Do you think a light coating of silicone dielectric grease would more
>>>permanently solve that corrosion problem ?
>>
>>>Two dissimilar metals, plus the electrolyte acid rain = galvanic corrosion.
>>>The grease would keep out the acid rain/moisture.
>>
>>>I would even consider the grease treatment and a waterproof taping
>>>on all coaxial joints exposed to the elements.
>>
>>>Stan, W1LE Stan, I suppose it can't hurt. Rad Shack & others sell the male cable F connectorspre-silicone-gelled. IMHO it seems in part to stem from the low signal level nature ofa feedline for a passive rx antenna---not enough uVs and pico-amps to overcome the residual resistanceat the F center pin interface that eventually builds up. Sometimes it seems thermal expansion/contractioninduced with weather temp changes cause the RG6 center conductor to move slightly and change resistanceat the physical connector interface. I know if I give the rx antenna transmission lines a mild jolt once a week that it solves the problem. If I ran my AL-82 amp on HF more often, the induced milliwatts into the rx antenna would likely be enough power to prevent the issue. John, XIQ, mentioned to me in an e-mail a few minutes ago he turns his rx antenna towards his tx antenna during tuneup to clean the relay contacts on his rx system as a similar preventative measure.... Likely a goo
> d
>> reason for me to put some relays in the receive antenna transformer boxes for directional switching---the regularDC power cycling of the relays with a DC up the coax arrangement would be an automatic maintenance solution....Perhaps others on the list will share their experiences on the subject.....73 Mike wa3tts
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