Who manufactured this cable and when?
Please note that the mystery is now solved. Just keep scrolling for the answer.Thanks.
Inner Conductor - Copper.
Dielectric - Separate operation injected low density polyethylene, equally spaced (but slightly loose) along the inner conductor. The disks are sort of held in place by the outer conductor.
Outer Conductor - Copper tape rolled into a circular shape with fingers along the longitudinal edges interleaved and roll crimped down. (Interleave your fingers and you will see what we mean.) The coax is not waterproof and relies only on its jackets and polybutene flooding for moisture protection. I have seen the 375 and 412 sizes.
This is a very old and obsolete product and it is often referred to as "PD cable" which apparently stands for pressurized design. If however clean dry air is introduced into the cable, the disks tend to slide along the inner conductor until sufficient free distance is reached for the inner conductor catenary to short against the outer conductor. Thus there seems little chance of blowing water out of an installed cable.
We have talked with the local CATV company and we should get a cable sample from the systems installers the next time one of these cables is replaced. We will open and photograph the sample and link the picture to this message thread.
Kindest regards,
Peter Stewart-Hay
Principal
Stewart-Hay Associates
www.Stewart-Hay.com