There has been discussion recently about the quality of UHF connectors from manufacturers other than Amphenol. The consensus has been that they should be avoided. I'm replacing some feedlines, and wa
You might call The Rf Connection and talk to Joel. I have always found him to be forthright about the quality of the connectors he sells, while acknowledging that he does sell some cheap junk because
I have experienced arcing (dielectric breakdown) on one of these--manufacturer unknown, but assumed PRC origin. This was after 1 year in-line. About 500 watts at the time. I don't know how you avoid
I got some 6" bulkhead connectors from max-gain systems. They look nice enough and seem to work ok so far. Also some of their silver plated connectors but I haven't tried those yet. -- -Chris _______
I have purchased long bulkhead connectors from the Wireman in the past. He seemed to be able to supply any length you wanted, although some may be a special order. He always seems to sell high qualit
Hi John, I'm just going to use the 83-1F (2" long) bulkhead fittings, mounted to a piece of angle stock inside a weatherproof housing. The angle stock makes grounding easy. DX Engineering was my
Try this page over at Quicksilver Radio Products. About half way down the page he has buikhead SO-239 starting at 2 inches up to 12 inches long. Plus heavy duty washers and nuts if needed. http://qsr
HRO sells them too. Mike W0MU W0MU-1 CC Cluster w0mu.net _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ TowerTalk mailing list TowerTalk@contesting.co
One thing I dislike about connectors is those that have 4 notches in them instead of teeth all the way around and unfortunately they are becoming much more common lately. This seems to be a way of sa