![]() Now I had my USB Wi-Fi antenna wire on the inside of the cabinet up front above my couch. ![]() I passed the USB wire thru the hole and filled it with some rigid spray in foam (images 1945, 1947) and after it hardened up, I smoothed it out and covered it with some more tape (image 1979, 1978). When I got to the very front I drilled holes and made them into a square hole so I could pass the end of the wire thru which has a USB connector on the end. Over the edge of the trailer by my satellite locking bracket and on the side up to the front under the molding with more tape (image 1944). Then I zip tied the Wi-Fi wire to the tv wire at its base making sure that there was ample wire in case I ever needed to rotate the tv antenna and then ran the wire across the roof towards the front street side edge securing the loose wire with some Eternabond tape (image 1943). These pads have little slots built into them to hold zip ties to them (images 1941, 1942) to secure the wire (you can find them at Lowes). I ran the wire down one of the legs of the crank-up and secured it with these zip tie mounting pads that are 1″x1″ squares with adhesive on the back and a screw hole (that I used as well). That way I wouldn’t have to get up on a ladder or the roof to raise it (I could do that from inside the trailer) and it would also give the Wi-Fi antenna an extra 3′ in height. ![]() ![]() I decided to mount this 5′ Wi-Fi booster antenna onto the crank-up over the air television antenna mast (images 1940, 1956, 1957). ![]()
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