jimindm
Well-known member
I think I did it this time. I usually figure out a way to fix screw ups, but I am not sure there is an easy solutions to this.
Built a garage 25 years ago, at the time I ran direct burial wire for the phone, large plastic conduit for the power, and a small plastic conduit, that at the time was just cable tv coax. NG line in the bottom
15 years ago we added on and all of it is kind of in the same spot and has worked OK. A few years ago the wife smacked the smaller conduit coming out of the ground with the mower and snapped it. Late fall, just put some good rubberized tape on it, and put it on my list of chores.
Last year we improved that whole side of the house with landscaping and a retaining wall. Not a tall wall, but a few feet high. Thought then I should fix that, but did not.
I work full time in the garage turning wrenches. Most every information system, is now subscription based. Have used wifi for a while, but with three older teens and a mother using wifi on every known application there is, it get real slow at times.
Even on wifi, any streaming is slow, and I just felt like if I invested in information software, I should hardwire it.
A few months ago the cable in the garage went kind of screwy and the repair guy said it is the older wiring and needed upgrading. The phone started acting up, and I just switched around some of the wires and got it fixed.
That leads me to my problem. I decided this was the weekend to do it. Pulled the cable wire out, fixed the conduit connection and thought I would run 2 cat 6 and a newer version of coax for cable. It is half inch conduit, wires were tight but would push mostly easy and a few times got hard.
First try I had just mason line hooked to the end, and it pulled good until it stopped. Eventually I snapped the mason line and pulled everything out for the night. Today I pushed a fish tape through with no problem and bought that little adaptor that resembles chinese fingers. Thought I would try from the other end.
It went about twelve feet and stopped. Kind of gave some good yanks and it just plain would not move. Like yesterday, it went very easy, until it did not move.
Well in my quest to pull it back out or just yank a little more, it popped. I pulled on the wire side and had the wires in my hand. No coax connector, and no chinese finger attachment. Pulled on the fish tape and ended up with a straightened tip.
I sure would like to finish this project. Even thought maybe just running one leg of cat 6 instead of the second one for the phone. At this point I really am not sure why the wiring just stopped. I do know that I have a busted fish tape end, and an attachment with a coax connector lodged in it.
The worst part is I would guess it is just about at the retaining wall. I have racked my brain trying to come up with an idea of getting that out, sort of getting back to square one.
For whatever reason when I built the garage, everything is about 42 inches in the ground, with the NG line for heat.
I have just kind of figured that digging it up is about the only way, unless some one has an idea. I know it does not need to be that deep, and if I am digging, I am not sure whether to dig deep in one place and repair, or put another conduit in that is not so deep. I would have to get under a sidewalk if doing that.
I think I know what the answer will be, but boy if I could some how get that stuck piece out, it would be great.
Built a garage 25 years ago, at the time I ran direct burial wire for the phone, large plastic conduit for the power, and a small plastic conduit, that at the time was just cable tv coax. NG line in the bottom
15 years ago we added on and all of it is kind of in the same spot and has worked OK. A few years ago the wife smacked the smaller conduit coming out of the ground with the mower and snapped it. Late fall, just put some good rubberized tape on it, and put it on my list of chores.
Last year we improved that whole side of the house with landscaping and a retaining wall. Not a tall wall, but a few feet high. Thought then I should fix that, but did not.
I work full time in the garage turning wrenches. Most every information system, is now subscription based. Have used wifi for a while, but with three older teens and a mother using wifi on every known application there is, it get real slow at times.
Even on wifi, any streaming is slow, and I just felt like if I invested in information software, I should hardwire it.
A few months ago the cable in the garage went kind of screwy and the repair guy said it is the older wiring and needed upgrading. The phone started acting up, and I just switched around some of the wires and got it fixed.
That leads me to my problem. I decided this was the weekend to do it. Pulled the cable wire out, fixed the conduit connection and thought I would run 2 cat 6 and a newer version of coax for cable. It is half inch conduit, wires were tight but would push mostly easy and a few times got hard.
First try I had just mason line hooked to the end, and it pulled good until it stopped. Eventually I snapped the mason line and pulled everything out for the night. Today I pushed a fish tape through with no problem and bought that little adaptor that resembles chinese fingers. Thought I would try from the other end.
It went about twelve feet and stopped. Kind of gave some good yanks and it just plain would not move. Like yesterday, it went very easy, until it did not move.
Well in my quest to pull it back out or just yank a little more, it popped. I pulled on the wire side and had the wires in my hand. No coax connector, and no chinese finger attachment. Pulled on the fish tape and ended up with a straightened tip.
I sure would like to finish this project. Even thought maybe just running one leg of cat 6 instead of the second one for the phone. At this point I really am not sure why the wiring just stopped. I do know that I have a busted fish tape end, and an attachment with a coax connector lodged in it.
The worst part is I would guess it is just about at the retaining wall. I have racked my brain trying to come up with an idea of getting that out, sort of getting back to square one.
For whatever reason when I built the garage, everything is about 42 inches in the ground, with the NG line for heat.
I have just kind of figured that digging it up is about the only way, unless some one has an idea. I know it does not need to be that deep, and if I am digging, I am not sure whether to dig deep in one place and repair, or put another conduit in that is not so deep. I would have to get under a sidewalk if doing that.
I think I know what the answer will be, but boy if I could some how get that stuck piece out, it would be great.
