What kind of connector has 0.5 dB loss at 2 meters? And what's the loss 
mechanism? Is there some kind of connector out there filled with carbon 
or something? Who made the measurements and how? 
 
The ARRL Antenna Book shows RG-58/U and RG-58B/U (plain copper center 
conductor) as having just under 6 dB/100' attenuation at 2 meters, and 
RG-58A/U and RG-58C/U (tinned copper) as about 6.5 dB/100'. I checked a 
100' piece of RG-58C/U in my junk box and found it to be 5.6 dB/100' at 
146 MHz. So I'd expect 20 feet or so to have just over 1 dB of 
attenuation, almost certainly not enough to notice except perhaps just 
barely, if you were right at the noise level. Certainly it wouldn't be 
noticeably improved by using some other kind of cable. 
 
Oh, and that measurement was made with BNC connectors on both ends. The 
loss of those connectors shouldn't be measurable except with extremely 
sensitive equipment. 
 
Roy Lewallen, W7EL 
 
Howard wrote: 
 
 How do you figure a 3 dB loss?  A mobile installation 'typically' uses 
 RG-58 which at 2 meters has about 4.5 dB loss per 100 feet and most 
 mobile antenna's come with 15 - 20 feet of cable.  As I see it, that's 
 about 1 dB loss (or thereabouts) for the cable and I've seen connector 
 loss figures hover around 0.5 dB.  At a 1.5 dB loss roughly 1/4 of the 
 signal is not unreasonable which would put it at the 40 watts you 
 mention.  I don't [totally] aruge your conclusion - just your 3 dB 
 assertion. 
 
 Am I missing something? 
 Howard 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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