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 How about folding the shields back a little? I think that's a superior 
way
of doing it as opposed to cutting them all flush with the jacket.
 
Be careful doing that or using any non-approved assembly method, or using 
improper connectors. Many cables (I'm not sure exactly what percentage, 
but I saw a lot of them) aluminize mylar to form the foil shield. You can 
usually see the mylar on close inspection, it often is blue or a blue 
tint. This insulates one side of the foil. 
The shield that must have the best integrity at connectors is the shield 
just outside to the center conductor. Nearly all shield current in on the 
inside of that shield. If you do not get a good solid connection to the 
INSIDE wall of that shield, the cable will have all sorts of issues. It 
doesn't matter how solid outside shield connections are, because the 
innermost surface of the innermost shield does all of the real work. 
The inner wall connection can be, and usually is, by conduction across the 
cut end of the shield. Say the inner shield is mylar on the dielectric 
side, or bonded to the dielectric. The bare outside contacts the braid 
with pressure. The current just travels across the cut end edge (a very 
short path) to the inside of the inner shield. 
If you do something to miss that good solid end connection to the inner 
foil edge, like folding a mylar shield over so blue side is out,  the 
connection is by stray coupling over what can be a pretty long length of 
cable, adding many feet to the shield connection path.    Or you might 
have no connection at all. 
I generally avoid quad shield, because the extra layers are unnecessary 
and can often cause connection problems. This is especially true outside 
with lightning and age. 
 I asked a question here some months ago about whether or not that should 
be
done or not on my flooded quad-shield F-6 (the CATV alum. shield version 
of
RG-6) that I use for my Beverages and to feed my inverted-L. Some people
said "absolutely not!" and others said "absolutely they should!".
 
People do all sorts of strange things with shields. With copper braid, 
aluminum braid, or solid aluminum foil (not aluminized mylar) you can do 
almost anything at HF and get away with it. I see people fold the shield 
back over RG-8 and screw the connector over it! Just because it works in 
some cases, that doesn't mean it is a good idea. 
One cable that is really misused is LMR400. If you solder to the braid on 
LMR400, you set yourself up for shield connection problems. This is 
because the inner foil, and that is the real shield, often moves away from 
the braid and makes a sloppy connection. Sometimes wiggling the cable will 
make the electrical length of the cable change, and shield integrity is 
all over the place, when the cable is soldered. This generally won't hurt 
with dipoles, but it can with critical applications. Crimps actually make 
a better connection. 
 
Since folding them back is the only way of being sure that the braids are
all making contact with the shell of the F connector, I now fold the
shields back a little in my snap-and-seal F connectors. How can that hurt
anything? I think it's a better way to do it.
 
I would always use the correct connector, and install the connectors the 
way the connector and cable manufacturer say. They usually know more about 
their products than we do.  :-) 
It is a bad idea to "improve" installation instructions without 
understanding the product in precise detail. How many people do you think 
understand the issue caused by overlaying a foil shield with braid, and 
soldering to the braid? 
73 Tom
 
CATV installers use almost 100% quad shield in order to keep the signals 
inside and not cause interfering leakage (egress); FCC specs are adamant 
about that. These specs go back to the 70's. In more recent years the cable 
also must keep local RFI (ingress) out. 
For topband Id suspect that the foil  thickness is so thin that some skin 
depth currents are on the outside. The foil is BONDED to the foam dielectric 
and is not supposed to be folded back; I dont know where that misinformation 
originated. 
Id suggest actually reading the connector manufacturers and major 
installation professionals cable prep instructions and all the ones Ive seen 
specifically states to NOT fold back that foil. 
For QS the outer braid is folded back, the next layer is the outer foil and 
that is removed, and then the inner braid is folded back. The inner foil 
goes thru the connector tube and both braids go between the outer and inner 
tubes. 
Carl
KM1H 
All good topband ops know fine whiskey is a daylight beverage.
_________________
Topband Reflector
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