Antenna icing mostly happens when things are real close to freezing. Like a wet 
cloud 
depositing moisture on cold antennas. When things are well below freezing, like 
most 
mountain the northeast for the whole winter, there is not much icing. We do get 
a little at 
the beginning and ending of the winter.

On Wed, Apr 21, 2010 at 05:16:20PM -0400, Jerry Richardson wrote:
> Heads up to the East. Just had a NNW facing AP ice up on Mt Diablo - can't 
> believe it..
> 
> There was enough ice buildup to drop over half the subs so it had to pile on 
> quickly.
> 
> Temperature is rising and the customers are coming back but that's some 
> bizarre stuff for 
> this area.
> 
> [cid:[email protected]]
> Broadband for Business
> Public and Private WiFi
> 
> Jerry Richardson
> VP Operations
> 925-260-4119 x2
> Website<http://www.aircloud.com/>   Blog<http://weblog.aircloud.com/>   
> Twitter<http://www.twitter.com/aircloudbband>   
> LinkedIn<http://www.linkedin.com/pub/jerry-richardson/6/372/354>
> 



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-- 
/*
Jason Philbrook   |   Midcoast Internet Solutions - Wireless and DSL
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