Hi John,
As Pat has already said, just score it lengthwise with a boxcutter. If it's
a cold, or cool day you may need to use a pair of pliers, but it usually
seperates cleanly from the cable. Some times a bit of the hot-melt glue
will stick to the connector but that doesn't hurt the reusability of them.
It not only adds waterproofing, but a lot of mechanical strength so the
splice is not very flexible. Then again splices made using connectors aren't
flexible to begin with.
Cost wise the MMM stuff is arould $10 per lenght which is some where between
3 and 4 feet long. I purchase it at the local electrical supply/wholesalers.
Roger (K8RI)
>I saw that Roger, K8RI, used heat shrink tubing with "sticky goo" inside
> for his coax connections. I've got a supply of that from my days at the
> local utility. We used it for PERMANENT underground splices.
>
> Has anyone (Roger??) had experience removing that heat shrink from a
> connection? I'm about to put up a tower with three antennas on it and
> was planning on using "coax-seal" but that heat shrink would be better
> but I've never had to remove it before.
>
> John KE7JGB
>
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