On 11/15/2012 7:50 PM, John Becker wrote:
Amphenol makes several different solder-type PL-259 plugs.
http://www.amphenolrf.com/products/CatalogPages/UHF.pdf
http://www.amphenolrf.com/search.asp?sid=50A430806CC8617F&N=57+4294966936+4294967230+4294967257
Some have a Teflon insulator, and some are Phenolic. I've seen three
different colors of what I assume are phenolic: Dark yellow (very old),
light yellow, and blue.
I can find nothing in Amphenol's literature to suggest which insulator
is preferable under which circumstance.
Teflon is normally preferable.
The Teflon plugs seem to be the
most expensive,
But not by much.
but are they actually any better than phenolic? I know
it can be difficult to re-use a Teflon connector because the heat
necessary to unsolder them can cause the center pin to shift.
If that happens you are using wayyy too much heat.
Teflon will cold flow under tension or pressure, but again that
shouldn't be a problem in a PL-259
IF the center pin shifts with normal soldering then the insulator is not
Teflon, but more likely something like PVC. Many generic connectors of
all types are coming with this cheap thermoplastic as insulators, but
you usually see that in multi conductor connectors such as the DIN
connectors.
Can anyone pass along some enlightenment on this subject? Thanks!
Jim has some good information.
73
Roger (K8RI)
73, John, K9MM
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