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#1
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If Davis 9914 has the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral
thing like 9913, Davis BuryFlex 9914 does not have the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral. 1. http://www.davisrf.com/ham1/coax.htm#buryflex It amazes me that no one else (that I can find) has found Davis BuryFlex to be "bad coax". It has been in production well over 10 years. Moreover I am amazed how many of you are non-thinking lambs following along head-to-tail after your shepherd. And also Davis emphasizes in it's data that this coax is flexible enough for rotator loops and yet one guy says it is "bad coax" and so everyone falls to their knees and worships accordingly? And as far as data goes...is this guys data more accurate then the Davis RF company that has been in the wire and cable business with engineering professionals on the payroll since 1980? Sheesh......take off the blinders people.....thousands of miles of Davis 9914 have been installed by government,commercial and amateur stations and just now we find out it's "bad coax" after more than 10 years? Somebody is asleep at the switch....... -- Charlie "Mike" wrote in message . net... I had a bad experience with Belden 9913 and if Davis 9914 has the same mechanical properties, be careful. I taped some 9913 to a mast and sometime later discovered it had been squished flat from the tight wrap of electrical tape. I have also seen people ty-rap 9913 and destroy its shape. If Davis 9914 has the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral thing like 9913, I would not be surprised with varying performance when bending it. Here is some coax that looks like better performance than 9913 or Davis 9914 (2.7dB/450MHz/100ft) has the same Polyethylene outer jacket as Davis and is cheaper. Check http://yanta.pair.com/jefatech/specs...LL400Specs.pdf Mike Charlie wrote: I would recommend you take a look at Davis RF "BuryFlex" 9914. It is very nearly the exact same loss per 100ft (within a couple tenths of a db) as LMR400 and/or 9913. It can be directly buried in the soil with no other provisions needed. It has an abrasion resistant non-contaminating jacket that has a warranted 20 year service life. It is also quite affordable at about $.60/ft. It is very flexible and indeed is fine even as rotator loops. I use it on all bands I run from HF thru 6M and 2M. It uses standard UHF or N connectors as well. Loss per 100ft at 400MHZ is 2.9db Check it out here.... 1. http://www.davisrf.com/ham1/coax.htm#buryflex |
#2
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Charlie wrote:
Somebody is asleep at the switch....... The great majority of humans who have ever lived found it easier to follow than to think. (Just an observation - I don't know anything about 9914.) -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#3
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TY Cecil...sadly that is the essence of this thread.....
-- Charlie "Cecil Moore" wrote in message et... Charlie wrote: Somebody is asleep at the switch....... The great majority of humans who have ever lived found it easier to follow than to think. (Just an observation - I don't know anything about 9914.) -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#4
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I'd be glad to compare results and methodologies with anyone else who
has measured this coax. It would be particularly interesting and educational if someone else's results are significantly different from mine. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Charlie wrote: If Davis 9914 has the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral thing like 9913, Davis BuryFlex 9914 does not have the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral. 1. http://www.davisrf.com/ham1/coax.htm#buryflex It amazes me that no one else (that I can find) has found Davis BuryFlex to be "bad coax". It has been in production well over 10 years. Moreover I am amazed how many of you are non-thinking lambs following along head-to-tail after your shepherd. And also Davis emphasizes in it's data that this coax is flexible enough for rotator loops and yet one guy says it is "bad coax" and so everyone falls to their knees and worships accordingly? And as far as data goes...is this guys data more accurate then the Davis RF company that has been in the wire and cable business with engineering professionals on the payroll since 1980? Sheesh......take off the blinders people.....thousands of miles of Davis 9914 have been installed by government,commercial and amateur stations and just now we find out it's "bad coax" after more than 10 years? Somebody is asleep at the switch....... |
#5
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I have emailed Davis RF and asked them to send me their test results. Yes
it will be interesting. Roy..doesn't seem a bit odd that NO ONE ELSE in over 10 years of BuryFlex production has cited these same alarming "test results". -- Charlie "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I'd be glad to compare results and methodologies with anyone else who has measured this coax. It would be particularly interesting and educational if someone else's results are significantly different from mine. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Charlie wrote: If Davis 9914 has the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral thing like 9913, Davis BuryFlex 9914 does not have the center conductor suspended by a thin spiral. 1. http://www.davisrf.com/ham1/coax.htm#buryflex It amazes me that no one else (that I can find) has found Davis BuryFlex to be "bad coax". It has been in production well over 10 years. Moreover I am amazed how many of you are non-thinking lambs following along head-to-tail after your shepherd. And also Davis emphasizes in it's data that this coax is flexible enough for rotator loops and yet one guy says it is "bad coax" and so everyone falls to their knees and worships accordingly? And as far as data goes...is this guys data more accurate then the Davis RF company that has been in the wire and cable business with engineering professionals on the payroll since 1980? Sheesh......take off the blinders people.....thousands of miles of Davis 9914 have been installed by government,commercial and amateur stations and just now we find out it's "bad coax" after more than 10 years? Somebody is asleep at the switch....... |
#6
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Charlie wrote:
I have emailed Davis RF and asked them to send me their test results. Yes it will be interesting. Roy..doesn't seem a bit odd that NO ONE ELSE in over 10 years of BuryFlex production has cited these same alarming "test results". No. My experience is that the vast majority of amateurs don't have the ability and/or confidence and/or interest and/or equipment to make good measurements. And lacking the ability to measure it, very few would be able to discern the difference in loss. If my measurements are typical, commercial and government users (if there indeed are any for this particular cable type) would quietly reject the stuff on incoming inspection and order something else. I do have a high degree of confidence that my measurements are accurate. I took a lot of care in characterizing the cable before using it for making remote antenna impedance measurements in the course of a consulting job. But it's entirely possible that the particular piece of cable I have is defective. That would just point to a quality control problem rather than overzealous specsmanship. In your query of Davis, I hope you asked them if they routinely test production batches for loss, and if so how often and when the last test was run. It's possible that something in their process changed relatively recently. If no other reader of this newsgroup has some of this cable and the ability to test it, I'll see if I can arrange for someone else to make measurements and post results. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#7
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Roy the kind of test results you cited would be extremely evident whether
someone has a network analyzer or just an swr meter. That defense is sorely transparent in my opinion. To suggest that most amateurs would not even have any interest if their bent or coiled 9914 suddenly jumped off the scale for loss and mismatch is ludicrous to say the least. Let me be clear ...I am not disputing what you claim you got as test results. My conclusion is either the 100ft length you had was bad or something skewed your calibrated setup. My career was in microwave r&d and I know that it takes repeatable test results to form a valid, verifiable and publishable data. This is not personal Roy....but it is somewhat stimulating. -- Charlie "Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... Charlie wrote: I have emailed Davis RF and asked them to send me their test results. Yes it will be interesting. Roy..doesn't seem a bit odd that NO ONE ELSE in over 10 years of BuryFlex production has cited these same alarming "test results". No. My experience is that the vast majority of amateurs don't have the ability and/or confidence and/or interest and/or equipment to make good measurements. And lacking the ability to measure it, very few would be able to discern the difference in loss. If my measurements are typical, commercial and government users (if there indeed are any for this particular cable type) would quietly reject the stuff on incoming inspection and order something else. I do have a high degree of confidence that my measurements are accurate. I took a lot of care in characterizing the cable before using it for making remote antenna impedance measurements in the course of a consulting job. But it's entirely possible that the particular piece of cable I have is defective. That would just point to a quality control problem rather than overzealous specsmanship. In your query of Davis, I hope you asked them if they routinely test production batches for loss, and if so how often and when the last test was run. It's possible that something in their process changed relatively recently. If no other reader of this newsgroup has some of this cable and the ability to test it, I'll see if I can arrange for someone else to make measurements and post results. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#8
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Charlie wrote:
Roy the kind of test results you cited would be extremely evident whether someone has a network analyzer or just an swr meter. That defense is sorely transparent in my opinion. To suggest that most amateurs would not even have any interest if their bent or coiled 9914 suddenly jumped off the scale for loss and mismatch is ludicrous to say the least. Would you really notice if your cable loss was about 3 dB higher than specified at 400 MHz and if it varied by a dB or two when the cable is flexed and bent? What measurement equipment do you use which would cause this amount of extra loss to "jump off the scale"? And what causes you to think that increased loss would cause mismatch to "jump off the scale"? Increased loss will improve, not degrade, the impedance match. Let me be clear ...I am not disputing what you claim you got as test results. My conclusion is either the 100ft length you had was bad or something skewed your calibrated setup. What you have as evidence is Davis' spec on the one hand, and my measurement report on the other. You've chosen to believe that Davis' cable all meets its published specifications. I have exactly the same evidence, but know my capabilities and that of my equipment, so I believe my measurements -- but always keeping in mind that it's a single sample. Additional measurements made by someone else on another piece of the cable would increase the knowledge base, although I'm sure there are people who would choose to ignore the evidence no matter how much is presented. My career was in microwave r&d and I know that it takes repeatable test results to form a valid, verifiable and publishable data. That's great! Then you have the background to be able to make decent measurements, and you said you're using some of the cable. Why not just measure the loss in a length of it and report your results? This is not personal Roy....but it is somewhat stimulating. I hope it's caused a few people to think a bit about how they evaluate evidence to determine the truth of a matter. It's something which too many people are woefully unable or unwilling to do. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#9
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To find ALL electrical characteristics and performance of
solid-polyethylene transmission line, use program COAXPAIR, from audio frequencies to UHF. Accuracy is of the same order as physical dimensions can be measured. Use a micrometer to measure inner conductor diameter and diameter over insulant. Or just guess at it. No need to unwind the cable off the drum! In a few seconds, download COAXPAIR from website below and run immediately. ---- .................................................. .......... Regards from Reg, G4FGQ For Free Radio Design Software go to http://www.btinternet.com/~g4fgq.regp .................................................. .......... |
#10
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On Sat, 10 Dec 2005 17:15:44 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote: If no other reader of this newsgroup has some of this cable and the ability to test it, I'll see if I can arrange for someone else to make measurements and post results. Roy, this seems a case of brand loyalty vs objective measurement and evaluation (albeit on a single sample). You will change your mind based on more measurement data, either strengthening your existing opionion or changing it. Those with brand loyalty already know all they need to know, life is comfortable. You are talking different languages, and the only way there will be agreement is if you capitulate (which would be unprincipled in the absence of evidence). Owen I remember the fierce debates over 9913, there were nearly as many words written about how fabulous it was, as there were words written on how to keep water out of it. -- |
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