A week or two ago there was a thread here on the permissible bending radius of 
various types of coax, occasioned by a discussion of “ugly balun” chokes.  The 
problem, I gather, is that with a small radius turn the inner conductor can 
migrate through the dialectric.  I filed the point away but didn’t think much 
about it at the time since I don’t (as of this moment) use coax chokes.  But 
today, as I was doing some tidying up of the rat’s nest of cables behind my 
desk’s misleadingly neat façade, I noticed something.  The coax – RG8 – 
connecting the KPA500 to the KAT500 sitting atop takes a very sharp bend.  The 
same is true of the cable coming out of the K3, making a sharp right turn, 
travelling under the desk and then making another sharp turn to connect to the 
amp.  The same is true of the K2 and its tuner on which it is perched – a 
short, sharp turn.

I am going to guess that any change to the characteristic impedence, if the 
center conductors in the interconnects do migrate, would not itself be a 
problem over very short lengths.  But the possibility of a dialectric breakdown 
caused by a severe migration is more troubling.  So a question for those who 
know about such things:  In the zeal for tidyness and the shortest possible 
cables, is there a significant risk?  How fast does migration occur – should 
these sharp-U-turn interconnecting cables be replaced on some regular basis?

Ted, KN1CBR
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