No sweat, Jon. You have been careful, or maybe lucky, or maybe a bit of
both!
If you read "Belden Innovations," for many years running they warned about
using nylon tie-wraps with coaxial cable, and back in the old days (well, in
the 1980's anyway), used to void warranty on coaxial cable showing evidence
of being installed with tie-wraps or metallic clamps of any type. That's
just one manufacturer, but a fairly large one with decades of experience...
73 & happy cabling!
Steve, WB2WIK/6
"If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough." -
Mario Andretti
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jon Ogden [SMTP:na9d@speakeasy.net]
> Sent: Monday, October 07, 2002 4:04 PM
> To: Steve Katz; xppq; Towertalk@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: [Towertalk] coax on new tower ( high desert )
>
> on 10/7/02 4:09 PM, Steve Katz at stevek@jmr.com wrote:
>
> > The "failure" has nothing to do with frequency, or an impedance bump.
> The
> > failure is dielectric breakdown that occurs with high power operation
> and a
> > pinched dielectric. It's happened thousands of times, to lots of
> people,
> > and it's one of the several reasons that no "soft dielectric" cables are
> > included in MIL-C-17.
>
> I understand that. I've never seen it happen with any of the setups that
> I
> have done. Maybe I'm just careful about my cable runs.
>
> 73,
>
> Jon
> NA9D
>
> -------------------------------------
> Jon Ogden
> NA9D (ex: KE9NA)
>
> Life Member: ARRL, NRA
> Member: AMSAT, DXCC
>
> http://www.qsl.net/ke9na
>
> "A life lived in fear is a life half lived."
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