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#1
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Hello,
New at this. Have never tried this before, and would appreciate your opinion on. Have a coax cable with an mcx connector on one end, and an old small indoor antenna on the other. Would like to cut off and discard the antenna, but keep the mcx and cable to it. mcx on pigtails seem really hard to find at a reasonable cost. Then, I would like to solder some sort of bnc to the now bare end; possibly a solderable bulkhead bnc or... SW receiving application only; No transmitting. If the bnc bulkhead connector is left, more or less loose, rather than being mounted in some metallic enclosure, would I ever notice the difference for receiving 30 MHz ? Suggestions for other bnc types that are solderable, rather than the bulkhead style, that would be neater ? Thanks, Bob |
#2
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On 11/10/2012 6:49 PM, Bob wrote:
Hello, New at this. Have never tried this before, and would appreciate your opinion on. Have a coax cable with an mcx connector on one end, and an old small indoor antenna on the other. Would like to cut off and discard the antenna, but keep the mcx and cable to it. mcx on pigtails seem really hard to find at a reasonable cost. Then, I would like to solder some sort of bnc to the now bare end; possibly a solderable bulkhead bnc or... SW receiving application only; No transmitting. If the bnc bulkhead connector is left, more or less loose, rather than being mounted in some metallic enclosure, would I ever notice the difference for receiving 30 MHz ? Suggestions for other bnc types that are solderable, rather than the bulkhead style, that would be neater ? Thanks, Bob I am not sure from your description, but it sounds like the solderable connector you're describing has a small section -- less than an inch -- of the center conductor exposed. Although this violates best practices and makes that section of the cable unshielded, I doubt that it will make any audible difference below 30 MHz. With all good wishes, Kevin, WB4AIO. -- http://nationalvanguard.org/ http://kevinalfredstrom.com/ |
#3
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On Sat, 10 Nov 2012, Bob wrote:
Hello, New at this. Have never tried this before, and would appreciate your opinion on. Have a coax cable with an mcx connector on one end, and an old small indoor antenna on the other. Would like to cut off and discard the antenna, but keep the mcx and cable to it. mcx on pigtails seem really hard to find at a reasonable cost. Then, I would like to solder some sort of bnc to the now bare end; possibly a solderable bulkhead bnc or... SW receiving application only; No transmitting. If the bnc bulkhead connector is left, more or less loose, rather than being mounted in some metallic enclosure, would I ever notice the difference for receiving 30 MHz ? Suggestions for other bnc types that are solderable, rather than the bulkhead style, that would be neater ? I can almost picture some sort of hood in the old ARRL Handbook for situations like this. A piece of metal that mounts on the back of the female BNC connector to shield that area. Maybe I'm imagining it, or it was for some other connector. Get a small box and put the connector on it, though the hole where you bring the coax in will not be completely shielded. Put a male connector on the end, those are meant to fit the end of coax. Then if you really needed a female there, get a female to female BNC adapter to go between the two parts. For receiving the really worst part will really be a place to pick up noise if it's not shielded well. That may be an issue depending on where the end is. Near a window, there'll be less pickup than if the not quite shielded end is near noisy equipment. Michael |
#4
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Yes, it will work.
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