There is nothing wrong with crimped connectors if done properly.  Is 
this an antenna that was working fine and then stopped on one band with 
absolutely no changed in the shack or coax etc? What band is out of 
whack...I apologize for missing most of this thread.

Mike W0MU

J6M CQ WW DX CW Contest 2011
J6/W0MU November 21 - December 1 2011
W0MU-1 CC Cluster w0mu.net


On 11/2/2011 6:55 PM, Joe Ford wrote:
> Guy,
>
> Thanks for the tips. My coax jumpers are some I bought from a company I don't 
> remember exactly which one. It was one that I saw recommended somewhere. 
> Unfortunately the PL259s are crimped on but they seem to work okay. Just to 
> be sure, when I was troubleshooting the problem I replaced the jumper with no 
> change. I can't remember if I traded with the K2. I might have. I need to 
> change the coax anyway because I need them to be a little longer. If I can 
> find someone who sells good quality with soldered PL259s I'll probably order 
> them, otherwise I'll just make my on.
>
> I lowered the dipole, looked it over but didn't see anything except the ends 
> a rusting a little where they are tied to the insulators. Unfortunately it 
> doesn't hang free and clear. I have lots of trees. I tried to reroute it 
> where it would be more in the clear. Then I put it back up and it performs 
> the same. I guess the next step is to replace it with the other dipole that 
> tested okay. When I did the test I just hung the dipole between 2 trees. I 
> did not hang it where the problem dipole is so it was not a 100% valid test. 
> I'll try switching the 2 and see what happens. At least the test confirmed 
> the switch and balun are okay.
>
>
> Thanks for the suggestion about recording the swr across the antenna 
> bandwidth when it is new. I can plot a little graph and save it for future 
> use. Even for my beam which is not new it will be a good thing to have.
>
>
> Joe
> k4nvj
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Guy Olinger K2AV<olin...@bellsouth.net>
> To: Joe Ford<k4...@yahoo.com>
> Cc: Elecraft<elecraft@mailman.qth.net>; 
> "w3...@embarqmail.com"<w3...@embarqmail.com>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 2, 2011 3:49 PM
> Subject: Re: K3 Strange Problem
>
> On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 9:24 PM, Joe Ford<k4...@yahoo.com>  wrote:
>
> ... I'll take down the ant and inspect it.But it works fine on all the other
>> bands. Tunes with no problems all other bands. The KAT100 tunes but the KAT3
>> doesn't?
> Tuning all bands using a single antenna is always dicey
> somewhere.Success is NOT guaranteed, but fortunate.  You are often
> operating at the fringe of a tuner's range on one band or another.
> The KAT 100 and KAT3 are not the same tuners, have different coils,
> different tradeoffs, and different firmware to drive it.  Though the
> ranges are approximately the same, give the two units an impedance at
> the far fringe, and one or the other may not be able tune it properly.
>
> Change any of the coax lengths after the tuner, INCLUDING THOSE INSIDE
> THE K3, by switching, exchange, or whatever, and what just barely got
> tuned the last time by the same tuner may not now tune.
>
> Though this may not be your problem at all, a friend of mine was
> having troubles of this mysterious sort. Eventually he discovered that
> he had not soldered either the braid OR the center conductor on a
> PL259.  It worked for YEARS before it finally started getting
> intermittent.
>
> Another ham had a balun that was gradually going bad and overheating,
> apparently shorting some turns and causing mysterious changes in SWR.
> He discovered that because during a QRO contest it caught fire and
> completely shorted out.  Actually his wife discovered it looking out
> the window at the tower out in the field, and came and told him his
> tower was on fire.
>
> The way to validate and check out one of these compromise antennas, is
> to run it when it is brand new and working spiffy.  SWEEP the MFJ
> CONTINUOUSLY from the bottom of the lowest band to the top of the
> highest band.  Note the actual resonances you find along the way.
> Write down those frequencies, the R at those resonant frequencies, and
> the 2:1 SWR points above and below all of those resonances. Entirely
> possible that all of the resonances are outside the ham bands.  Keep
> these figures as a reference.  When you have trouble, repeat the
> measurements.  IF there is trouble in the antenna, those readings will
> change.  If the coax gets waterlogged, the 2:1 SWR points will broaden
> out significantly and the R values at resonance will likely change.
> If something gets broken the resonances will all move on you.
>
> If you have an AIM 4170 as your analyzer, just sweep it from 0.5 to 30
> MHz and save the file.  You can then import it and have an onscreen
> compare between the old and new readings.
>
> 73, Guy.
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