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On 5/7/2013 7:55 PM, Tom W8JI wrote:
 
LMR400 or any cable, in sensitive applications, requires a solid bond 
to the shield that carries the vast majority of return current. In the 
case of almost all cables on HF and higher, that is the innermost 
foil. Of course it is different at audio or lower frequencies. 
One common connector problem comes from not forcing the woven shield 
tight against the foil at the connector, or having the foil or woven 
shield tarnish or corrode. The path to the inside of the foil is out 
on the braid to an eventual contact point, then back on the outside of 
the foil to the foil edge. At the edge current can go inside.  This is 
like adding 2X the length of the path to the connection point in 
overall shield connection path length. 
(Current can also "get in" across the edge of a longitudinal seam, if 
the seam's overlap is insulated. The problem with that is the seam can 
kill UHF performance.) 
If you solder to the shield of LMR400, and put it on a network 
analyzer and measure the "stub" characteristics, many times (not 
always) it will move around as the cable is flexed. This is because 
the soldering heat contracts the dielectric, releasing pressure 
between the braid overlay and the foil. Now you have a crummy 
connection that changes electrical length of the connection to the 
"real" shield. 
Even if you do things right, once the foil and braid develop an oxide 
layer the connection goes away. This can work its way out for several 
feet of cable length, really messing up a cable. This will not show 
with a single shield. 
Cables with foil have to be installed and treated correctly. The more 
layers you add, the more careful we must be. Since the extra layers 
are pretty much meaningless, the best practice is to avoid them. Use a 
good shield against the center and connect to it at the connector. 
 
Tom,
I'll have to admit that I haven't given this much thought, but what you 
are saying about the foil to braid contact makes perfect sense. I do 
recall one friend who is a rabid VHF/UHF repeater builder complaining 
that LMR-400 has issues with IMD. Perhaps this is why. Can you recommend 
a source for a good LMR-400 crimp connectors and the corresponding 
installation tools? To date I've been soldering PL-259s on all the 
LMR-400 I've used as if it were regular single shield RG8. I haven't had 
any hard failures, but clearly there is some risk to doing this 
depending on the application. In fact I do recall some phantom 
inter-station QRM that would come and go when we had an SO2R setup 
running at W6UE some years back. Some of the coax used in that setup was 
LMR-400 with soldered PL-259s. 
73, Mike W4EF.................
All good topband ops know how to put up a beverage at night.
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Topband Reflector
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