When my roof was replaced about 20 years ago, the roofers had to accommodate 
all of my cables to my ham-satellite antennas (10M – 13cm). They just put them 
under the nearest shingles, and up to the antennas. It has never leaked, looks 
professional, and I have had no issues. Some of the coax cables may be getting 
old. I will just pull them out and feed new ones through the vacated hole(s). 
There is a sealing product that I have used called “Through The Roof”. It has 
done well on the holes in the garage roof caused by the basketball goal that is 
no longer needed by the “kids”. I plan to use it when I swap out some coax 
cables.

 

My other story is how I put the azimuth rotator for my Hamsat antennas on the 
floor of the attic, and rotate it through the roof, with no leaks or issues…

 

Andy W5ACM

 

From: BVARC [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Hold via BVARC
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2020 2:52 PM
To: BRAZOS VALLEY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB <[email protected]>
Cc: David Hold <[email protected]>; Mark Brantana <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [BVARC] Running Cables through the Roof

 

Try what roofers call an air hawk

  Not have to worry about unsupported pipe penetration 



 

 

On Wed, May 6, 2020 at 2:44 PM Mark Brantana via BVARC <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

I am looking for a shorter route and neater route to install my antenna on my 
roof.  Currently, I have a TV antenna running though the eaves and stringing 
over the the gutter up to the antenna mounted on my chimney.  It does not look 
very good.  

 

I got the following idea from a posting a month or so ago on this listserver, 
but cannot recall who posted it:

 

I want to add a ham antenna and I am thinking of running a piece of 1.5”-2" 
roof pipe flashing with a gooseneck facing down to keep the weather out.  This 
way:

*        I should be able to add whatever cables I want, 
*       it will save me probably 30 ft of cable.  
*       there would be less visible cable on my roof. 

*       And I can add future cables very easily by just poking it up through 
this pipe. 

 

It does mean I need to cut a hole through the roof, but I have other flashing 
and vents on the roof, and they don’t leak.

 

I have not been able to find a satisfactory flashing product, since it has to 
hold the pipe rigid.  Most are meant for pvc vent access, where the pipe is 
supported inside.

Does anyone have any experience with this kind of flashing and how can I find 
it?

Mark
N5PRD

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David Hold [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

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