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![]() "Harold E. Johnson" wrote in message news:A1N1h.261969$1i1.61365@attbi_s72... If it has a solid center conductor, it is almost certainly 75 Ohm. The only exception I can think of is some weird version of RG58. Tam I do have a bunch of older RG-58 with solid center conductor, and pretty much all the HP BNC patch cables I've seen the insides of have a solid center. I believe the various semi-official versions (RG-58/U, RG-58A/U, RG-58B/U and RG-58C/U) tell whether the center is supposed to be solid or stranded, but that seems to have become *******ized. A quick Google search for RG58A yields cables with both solid and stranded centers. How about Belden 9913? Of course, the construction of that line is "different" enough that it would be hard to mistake it for something else, and I assume the poster would have mentioned the strange construction. Also, you're likely to find a solid center in higher impedance line like RG62/U, and you're likely to find stranded center on 75 ohm line (like RG-11/U, and others). And of course for some surplus custom line, all bets are off about both stranding and impedance! Cheers, Tom Well, I was going to avoid this, but when you chimed in Tom, couldn't help myself. In turn, I have a large helping of a Times Wire and Cable RG-8 size 50 Ohm coax with a solid inner conductor. Don't remember their nomenclature for it but it's a real bear getting "N" connectors onto it.. W4ZCB Solid could be 92 ohms too. |
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