I've got some issues with water ingress into some potted electronics.
The immersion depth is only 30cm or so.
The electronics is potted in epoxy with the cable sheath and then the insulated cable conductors inside the epoxy.
I trust the epoxy as it has been used hundreds of times in a very similar application.
...
Cheers.
Has the same cable been used to the same extent, in a similar application? Has the cable changed? Has something else
in the assembly or assembly process changed?
Two thoughts come to mind re the cable. I don't know if they are relevant here.
First, there is a phenomenon in watercooling PCs, where water gradually diffuses (permeates) out through some types of
tubing. To the uninitiated, it looks like a problem with seals and couplings. But no, it's just a property of the tubing material.
Second, it reminds me of a problem I've seen in a ship-to-shore power cable, carrying 100s of amps. The cable jacket was
supposed to be impermeable to water, but it wasn't. The problem was not in the synthetic rubber material itself, but in the catalyst
used to cure it.
The catalyst was hydrophilic, and there were small amounts of it left in the cable jacket, enough to compromise insulation resistance
over time. Nowhere was this catalyst property mentioned in the cable data sheet.