I've been using a red Folgers Classic Roast for three years now at the base of
my vertical with no signs of damage. I'd be surprised if many TopBand antenna
installations, at least at my level, stay in the dame configuration for more
than a few years. Seems we all like to tinker with 'em.
Bill noted painting as another option. So far the only exterior boxes I'm had
to paint were made of fiberglass. It seems they only take a few years of
weather before they need attention. Probably need to treat them like a boat and
do annual treatments...
So far, when I can find them cheap, the best general enclosures are grey PVC
and stainless steel. Finding the "right" size has been a challenge, usually
waaaay too big or just a smidge too small hihi
73,
Julius
n2wn
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Jim Brown" <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
>
> On Tue, 07 Jul 2009 17:17:47 -0400, Pete Smith wrote:
>
> >Many coffee manufacturers now make big plastic enclosures that are about
> >9 inches on a side. I've often thought that you could neatly mount
> >almost any small network in one of them, so lonmg as the lid was down.
>
> Yes, BUT -- when I mentioned an idea similar to that as the solution to
> mounting a matching network outdoors, my neighbor reminded me the UV from
> Old Sol attacks most plastic materials and turns them to little bits of
> cracked plastic. So the trick is finding a UV-resistant enclosure in the
> shape you suggest.
>
> 73,
>
> Jim K9YC
>
>
>
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