I have been installing for a about 5 years now, and in that time, have seen plenty of sections on 59 that has "burned out".
Do you understand electronics at all?
Yes. What kind of electronics would you like to talk about? Home theater? Or perhaps microcontrollers and circuit design? Or everything in between?
You want to know how this is going to happen, when it does...
Since you are using DPP... you will start losing the higher freq's that the 59 can't pass well.
OK, tell me why I will start losing them. I know RG59 does not pass higher frequencies well. This effect is intensified with longer cable lengths. However, if the RG59 will not pass those frequencies in the future, it certainly won't pass them now.
You will start noticing drop out on tuner 2. Eventually it will cause enough problem, you'll get annoyed and replace it
If you were running DP, I would tell you that you would start losing just the channels on the even transponders.
OK, I'll let you know [when] that happens.
And you assume that since it works now, it will always work.
Yes.
Wrong. For instance, 59 is not rated to carry the voltage and amperage that DP and DPP uses.
OK, now we're getting somewhere. Do you have numbers as to what the voltage and amperage that is run through these cables? I'd imagine there is not much current running through at all, and definitely NOT enough to cause problems. If it pleases you I'll grab the multimeter tomorrow morning and tell you exactly what the voltage being sent and the amperage being drawn is. Let me tell you, it won't be anything that RG59 can't handle. Coax cable is not made for carrying power either, rather it is for signal transfer. I'll look up the specs but the power is minimal and irrelevant. I though we were talking signal dropout, apparently you want to talk about melting cables.
So, because of more resistance because of the smaller wire (see OHM's law), the wire can and probably will, heat up.
Right, and as I said above, that is insignificant. The amount of power actually drawn is not important to this situation. If there was THAT MUCH power needed to the LNB, they'd make the LNB's powered directly.
Which COULD cause it to expand and make any imperfections in the wire show up. Or if there is a small crack in the copper, could cause it to pull apart when it gets hot, thus making you lose signal.
Right, and that's again implying thermodynamic heating. Which I swear another user here just told me is not what we're talking about. That will not happen.
What you're trying to base your argument on is actual burning up of the wire. This is the biggest BS I've ever heard. It's on the lines of the "plasma refills" that some guys at Best Buy used to talk about.
The issues encountered with RG59 use occur when the higher frequencies are dropped out by the cable. Which will either occur or it won't. For shorter runs, this is less of an issue than for longer runs. Yes, RG59 doesn't handle higher frequencies as well. But if it works now, it'll always work.