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Bill Turner wrote:
On Sat, 27 Nov 2004 11:51:01 -0500, James wrote: Ever been aboard an ocean going sail boat when the waves hit 5 meters and the wind is howling like a freight train? If not you can't imagine the fury. I've been there. It's exhilirating but not easy to endure. In fact it's damned hard work. That is NOT the time to be playing with knobs and switches trying to tune for a particular band. __________________________________________________ _______ Your point is well taken, but this is also NOT the time for equipment failure. If that nifty tuner gets dunked with a dollop of salt water, you are dead, RF wise. The KISS principle is your friend. Anyone who can do a sail change or heave to in 5 meter waves can clip or unclip a jumper, or better yet, will have the jumper set beforehand. To each his own. -- Bill W6WRT Thanks for the words of wisdom Bill. In fact I made a point of purchasing a tuner that comes in a water tight (read that water PROOF according to the manfacturer) case. It's high up mounted in a lazerette that "theoretically" stays dry. The ground and antenna stud are both 316 Stainless (highly corrosion resistant and intended for use in salt air). Furthermore, the electrical connection between antenna stud and wire is soldered, crimped, and then heat shrunk with adhesive lined shrink. Instead of using high tension wire for the antenna connection to the backstay wire, I used tinned copper heavy gauge insulated electrical wire. The environment that I live in is so corrosive that, believe it or not I had to strip back the jacket to expose the tinned copper wire, and then seal the cut edge of the jacket to prevent salt water ingress between jacket and wire. If that isn't done even tinned copper wire will corrode. Salt water will creep under the jacket and corrosion will occur for a few feet distance from the stripped jacket. All connections (RF, power and control) between tuner and radio are made with crimp and solder, then sealed with liquid electrical tape, then adhesive lined heat shrink. I bought really big insulators to go at both ends of the wire antenna too. Salt water is conductive and the larger insulator with heavy ribbing will hopefully reduce the surface coating of salty water to a level that precludes conductivity. Hopefully. the copper wire I ran up the mast is on it's own pulley (well it will be when I find time to go up the mast) and is already a lovely shade of green. I have a spare, and hope this one lasts a year before needing replacement. Even so, I expect to have to service the connections about once a year or so. And you thought putting a beam on a tower was hard! Just thought you'd find the lengths we have to go to in the ocean environment interesting. The KISS principle is followed where ever I can too. I sincerely agree. When things go badly on board, it's rarely one big bad thing that bites ya. It's a string of small problems that...when combined, lead to a bad day. I guess that's true in a lot of endeavors come to think of it. Last time I was in a bad storm (a really bad one at that) I was on the radio seeking information from someone else who had radar (I do not). My autohelm had failed (a lousy 25 cent pin broke) and so I had to hand steer in heavy seas. I couldn't leave the wheel. Fortunately the mic on my marine VHF radio ~just~ reached the wheel from inside. Unfortunately that is when I discovered that if I pulled on the mic cable it became very intermittent. And that led to me spending a half hour trying to raise a nearby boat with radar to ask which way the storm appeared to be moving. Then the lightning started hitting the water all around me...from there...well...let's just say it went downhill some. Simple is good. Thanks again for the feedback. |
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