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On 1/10/2014 11:13 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 18:06:54 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: (...) Actually, it's not the crimp job that kills the connection. It's the stripping of the coax that causes the most problems. I use various rotary contrivances that have razor blades to make the cuts at the correct spacing. Those work well initially, but after about 50 connectors, the blades become dull and useless. Of course, nobody has spare blades or knows how to adjust them. They either continue to use a dull razor or steal my new stripper. Oops... dinner... gone. The problem with the dull cutter usually creates problems where the dielectric ends, and where the solid center conductor is exposed. The dull blade pushes the aluminum shield over the end of the dielectric, shorting the aluminum or the braid wire to the center conductor. Even if it doesn't immediately short, some movement of the cable can cause it to short. When it gets to this point, I have to take a sharp knife and cut back the shielding so that it won't short. However, once the connector is pushed in place, it can't be checked or repaired. I can offer several other ways to do it wrong, but that should suffice for now. We don't let them get even close to that dullness. Our techs can tell when they're starting to get dull and replace them because problems will start much before when the shield pushes the shield over. For instance, the inner dielectric will distort, making it harder to install the connector. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
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