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How to stir up the heating of an external wi-fi antenna with minimal alterations?
In short, the street is now minus 35. This is not the limit. The antenna is located on a mast at a height of 9 meters. The mast is non-separable. If suddenly the light is cut off for a long time ....... It is necessary to cut off the welding and lower this entire system. In short, a horror movie .. if suddenly this happens. Antenna replacement is coming from RBQRTG-2SHPnD - MikroTik QRT-2 to RBSXTG-5HPacD-HG - MikroTik SXT HG5 AC. And then it dawns on me ... that it would be nice to cram a heat source into all this. And at the start, first start it, and then the antenna itself. Who has any bright ideas on this topic?
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Pick up a frost-resistant plastic shield for outdoor installation. Warm inside. Put all the equipment there + an electric heater with a thermostat (or without), which is used with outdoor automation panels.
Google anti-icing systems for the roof and downpipes. They are made on the basis of heating cables (as a "warm floor").
It seems to me that electric heating will give non-acid pickups, so drive oil through the pipes ...
1) Is it sure it won't start?
2) Isn't it easier to reserve food? mUPS?
It seems to me that any heating cables will affect the antenna. We need, as they rightly said, a hermetic box with a thermostat. But the first idea that came to my mind was to blow it with a hair dryer))
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