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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Hi,
What gadgets are being used to feed RG6 coax from an outside wall of my house, thru that lath and plaster wall, into a TV set on the inside of that wall. At Home Depot, all I find are small diameter white nylon bushings. Instructions are drill holes into wall and insdie and outside. Insert the bushings, feed the RG6 thru the bushings. Seal each bushing with RTV. What are cable TV installers or TV shop installers using as the feed-thru tube? Do these tubes have water tight seals at each end? Where can I buy these feed-thru tubes if they are used? Thank you for any helpful hints. Dave_S |
#2
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In many installations on the outside they just drill a hole, insert the
cable and seal everything with silicon.... on the inside of the house the cable may terminate into a wall mounted feed-through bulkhead connector/jack. -- Best Regards, Daniel Sofie Electronics Supply & Repair - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "Dave_s" wrote in message ... Hi, What gadgets are being used to feed RG6 coax from an outside wall of my house, thru that lath and plaster wall, into a TV set on the inside of that wall. At Home Depot, all I find are small diameter white nylon bushings. Instructions are drill holes into wall and insdie and outside. Insert the bushings, feed the RG6 thru the bushings. Seal each bushing with RTV. What are cable TV installers or TV shop installers using as the feed-thru tube? Do these tubes have water tight seals at each end? Where can I buy these feed-thru tubes if they are used? Thank you for any helpful hints. Dave_S |
#3
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You don't necessarily need the tube unless the wire doesn't want to cooperate
and go through to the inside. A coathanger can fix that. When you seal the tube to the outside siding or whatever, you are still sealing to the outside layer. The compromise to the "R" factor of the wall is very small as long as it's sealed with RTV. Using the tube, however, results in a more professional looking job, if you want to retain all of the "R" value you should find a way to use silicone all the way down the tube, or somehow maybe that expanding foam stuff. More importantly, make sure you know how and put a drip loop in it. This is all in which way you staple the wire, do it so the wire ultimately comes Uup/U to the hole, tube or not. I'm sure there are examples on the net somewhere or something. Basically all forms of sealant eventually fail, and with a drip loop you get 10 years before there's a problem instead of 2, as long as you keep that rain from running down the wire right into the hole. Then, gravity is your friend ![]() My two cents, hmm lemme see, that's not even ¼ of a cigarette, hmm it's closer to ¼ of a 12 oz. beer. Damn, I bet you could drink two cents worth of gasoline these days without dying. We are going to have to raise our rates, but don't worry about it. JURB |
#4
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Also, ground block located either outside or inside allowing proper
grounding of the cable to a known earth. I see a lot of professional installations having the ground block located outside the building, at the bottom of the drip loop, with the ground wire going to a known good earth return source like the cold water pipe. Not the gas main, yes I have seen quite a few that some idiot has connected the ground wire actually to the black metal gas line rather than a water pipe. Nothing amazes me any more about what ignorance abounds!! "JURB6006" wrote in message ... You don't necessarily need the tube unless the wire doesn't want to cooperate and go through to the inside. A coathanger can fix that. When you seal the tube to the outside siding or whatever, you are still sealing to the outside layer. The compromise to the "R" factor of the wall is very small as long as it's sealed with RTV. Using the tube, however, results in a more professional looking job, if you want to retain all of the "R" value you should find a way to use silicone all the way down the tube, or somehow maybe that expanding foam stuff. More importantly, make sure you know how and put a drip loop in it. This is all in which way you staple the wire, do it so the wire ultimately comes Uup/U to the hole, tube or not. I'm sure there are examples on the net somewhere or something. Basically all forms of sealant eventually fail, and with a drip loop you get 10 years before there's a problem instead of 2, as long as you keep that rain from running down the wire right into the hole. Then, gravity is your friend ![]() My two cents, hmm lemme see, that's not even ¼ of a cigarette, hmm it's closer to ¼ of a 12 oz. beer. Damn, I bet you could drink two cents worth of gasoline these days without dying. We are going to have to raise our rates, but don't worry about it. JURB |
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