A similar concoction is readily available in the U.S. Depending on who
manufactures it, the brand might be Penetrox, NoAlOx or OxGard. It is used by
electricians to enhance aluminum to aluminum and aluminum to copper or brass
electrical connections. Each of these products appears to be a mixt
On 7/16/2020 11:31 AM, KENT TRIMBLE wrote:
>
> The "quarter turn" idea most often refers to the trick of backing-off a
> screw "a quarter turn" and then re-tightening in order to break up
> corrosion. More than one restorer has brought vintage equipment to life
> by doing nothing more than that.
I use "Plasticene" (maybe known as modelling clay?)
In my experience it never hardens, it is waterproof and easy to remove. I
used to use the orange tapered vinyl boots that were used on mineral
insulated "Pyro" cable over the top since they are a great seal over PL259s
but I have used up my stock.
On 7/16/2020 2:25 PM, Gmail - George wrote:
I don't ever recall that tightening a
connector with pliers corrected these discontinuities. We solved the poorly
made connectors by going to crimp style of connectors.
There is a very large difference in signal to noise ratios and operating
power le
I wiggle the connector as I finger tighten the barrel. The result is that they
are difficult to unscrew. Also I use a heavy silicone grease on the threads and
on the back where the barrel contacts the connector. I have never had any
issues with water in 20 years doing that.
Jack BMW Motorcycles
I screw it down, wiggle it, back it off, wiggle it, push it down, screw it
down, repeat, then switch to Type N connectors (which don’t need any of that
nonsense).
wunder
K6WRU
Walter Underwood
CM87wj
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)
> On Jul 16, 2020, at 2:45 PM, Don Wilhelm wrote:
>
Amen, George, on mating the “tiny indentations.” It’s easy to ignore this step
because many hams think they mate automatically as the PL-259 penetrates the
SO-239. They sometimes don’t. The coax itself has to be rotated back and
forth until the mating can be felt through one’s fingers. Inden
One problem is that "finger-tight" is not the same for all hams.
The other is the use of off-brand connectors that do not fit well.
The other is that some connectors do not engage the protruding 'tabs' on
the PL-259 do not seat properly with the indentations on the SO-239.
Those are the ones for
Years ago in a land far-far away all video coax connectors in Broadcast
Television were UHF (PL259).
We only tightened them hand (finger) tight. In may places pliers would have
not fit any way.
In black & white days we would want to be flat from DC to around 8 MHz with
a smooth roll off to abou
On 7/16/2020 10:46 AM, Mike Harris via Elecraft wrote:
I must say that over many years and without any ill effect I've never
bought into this idea of Gorilering up a PL259 with pliers beyond finger
tight. A quarter of a turn is an unbelievable suggestion. I've just
tried it and a couple of degr
Mike . . .
I think he might have misspoken when suggesting using pliers to effect
an extra quarter-turn on a PL-259 after first getting it finger-tight.
The "quarter turn" idea most often refers to the trick of backing-off a
screw "a quarter turn" and then re-tightening in order to break up
I must say that over many years and without any ill effect I've never
bought into this idea of Gorilering up a PL259 with pliers beyond finger
tight. A quarter of a turn is an unbelievable suggestion. I've just
tried it and a couple of degrees is the best I could do without being
brutal and eve
Thanks for all the responses and suggestions. I've decided to go with the
American Radio Supply covers, as they looked the best quality. I'll combine
them with some Scotch/3M/rescue tape/coax-seal, whatever I can source
locally. I would have gone with the PL-259 idea if I'd had any used ones
around
On 7/16/2020 5:35 AM, Mike Harris via Elecraft wrote:
> A great selection of bits. Unfortunately when I tried to order a couple
> of microphone connector dust caps for my K2 and K3. The system took the
> order but they refused to post them.
Sometimes the vendor refuses to send to a post office bo
On 7/15/2020 6:50 PM, Drew AF2Z wrote:
> I would use Coax Seal. Same idea as duct seal but it's more pliable,
> more wx resistant and a little stickier. It will last forever, never
> hardens and can be peeled off when needed. Might want to screw pl-259
> shells onto the socket threads first, then
5, 2020 9:57 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Waterproof SO-239 covers
American Radio Supply sells metal covers that thread onto SO-239, and
have a soft rubber insert. I have been using them on outdoor connectors
for years now, and they work well...
73, and thanks,
Dave
du
Amateur Radio, KE9UW
aka Jack, BMW Motorcycles
From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net on
behalf of Dave Cole
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2020 9:57 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Waterproof SO-239 covers
American Radio Supply sells
Laziness maybe? Uninformed? I don’t know…frustrating for sure... I can tell you
that some people *IN* the US can’t get things shipped. I used to live in
Hawaii, its a state in the US, no customs forms, we’d pay the shipping, and
people STILL would not ship there.
Staggers the imagination.
73
This is frustrating for those of us who don’t live in the US or Europe. Even
before Corona I tried to order some hardware from McMaster-Carr in the US, only
to be (somewhat unpleasantly) turned down. The same from other suppliers.
I don’t know what’s the big deal when we pay the postage. I used t
A great selection of bits. Unfortunately when I tried to order a couple
of microphone connector dust caps for my K2 and K3. The system took the
order but they refused to post them.
Regards,
Mike VP8NO
On 15/07/2020 23:57, Dave Cole wrote:
American Radio Supply sells metal covers that thread o
l6=&wl7=&wl8=&wl9=pla&wl10=117084351&wl11=online&wl12=21154031&veh=sem&gclid=Cj0KCQjw0rr4BRCtARIsAB0_48MwYg3GYwxdnjFhsIbmpsQ4jhZ71aSUBZ8PhIGpokraWc5Wm6juwfQaAjzUEALw_wcB73,Gary
> K9GS
> Original message From: Ted Edwards W3TB
> Date: 7/15/20 8:00 PM (GMT-06:00) To: Gary K9GS Cc:
> Elecraft R
rom: Ted Edwards W3TB
Date: 7/15/20 8:00 PM (GMT-06:00) To: Gary K9GS Cc:
Elecraft Reflector Subject: Re: [Elecraft]
Waterproof SO-239 covers First prepare an old PL-259 like Gary K9GS said.Then
go shopping in the plumbing area — not in electrical — and buy Rescue Tape. It
stretches around that
American Radio Supply sells metal covers that thread onto SO-239, and
have a soft rubber insert. I have been using them on outdoor connectors
for years now, and they work well...
73, and thanks,
Dave (NK7Z)
https://www.nk7z.net
ARRL Volunteer Examiner
ARRL Technical Specialist
ARRL Asst. Direc
I would use Coax Seal. Same idea as duct seal but it's more pliable,
more wx resistant and a little stickier. It will last forever, never
hardens and can be peeled off when needed. Might want to screw pl-259
shells onto the socket threads first, then seal them. The sockets &
shells will be pris
> elecraft@mailman.qth.net> Subject: [Elecraft] Waterproof SO-239 covers I
> just built a window antenna feedthrough panel, and want some
> waterproofcovers for the unused bulkhead connectors. Most of the online
> reviews saythat even the ones advertised to be waterproof are in fact
ector
Subject: [Elecraft] Waterproof SO-239 covers I just built a window antenna
feedthrough panel, and want some waterproofcovers for the unused bulkhead
connectors. Most of the online reviews saythat even the ones advertised to be
waterproof are in fact not waterproof.Anyone have a source for ones
I wrap some duct seal putty around mine. Get it at Home Depot for cheap.
Works fine. I forget what I paid, around $2-3 for a brick of it I think.
Stays soft and pliable.
73 de Tom - KB2SMS
On 7/15/20 7:39 PM, Nate Bargmann wrote:
* On 2020 15 Jul 16:07 -0500, Doug Daniels wrote:
I just buil
* On 2020 15 Jul 16:07 -0500, Doug Daniels wrote:
> I just built a window antenna feedthrough panel, and want some waterproof
> covers for the unused bulkhead connectors. Most of the online reviews say
> that even the ones advertised to be waterproof are in fact not waterproof.
> Anyone have a sour
inal message From: Doug Daniels Date:
7/15/20 17:06 (GMT-05:00) To: Elecraft Reflector
Subject: [Elecraft] Waterproof SO-239 covers I just built a window antenna
feedthrough panel, and want some waterproofcovers for the unused bulkhead
connectors. Most of the online reviews saythat even
I just built a window antenna feedthrough panel, and want some waterproof
covers for the unused bulkhead connectors. Most of the online reviews say
that even the ones advertised to be waterproof are in fact not waterproof.
Anyone have a source for ones that are?
--
--... ...--
Doug
_
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