Steve Katz wrote:
> K8RI: I'm pretty sure those are the ones that turn a rough, dusty,
> bluish
> green around here. Nickel plate is terrible and silver just disappears.
>
> That's the main reason I never worry about turning connectors into
> permanent attachments and use the flooded heat shrink. IT also keeps
> them nice and clean.
>
> WB2WIK: You know, it's not what the outside of the connector looks like
> that's important. It's what happens inside. Using silver-plated,
> mil-spec UG-21D/U type N connectors, I've used them outdoors, completely
> unprotected, for years and years and years even at the seaside when I
> lived on the ocean in central NJ. The outsides turn very "black" in
> color, but the silver doesn't disappear -- it just develops an oxide
> coat, which actually protects the connector as soon as it happens.
>
I don't worry about them while they're "up there", but normally these
refuse to come apart with the nut becoming a permanent part of the body
on the shiny ones. All of the silver plated ones, at least on top of
the tower end up with no plating left. They are just green brass. IF
they come apart they squeal as the nut is turned out taking a good
portion of the threads with them. I normally use "N-type" for the
weather proofing as most of the external stuff is gone within a year or
two and bare UHF connectors provide no weather proofing. The MMM flooded
heat shrink is about the only stuff that has managed to stay, but it
hasn't had a real work out with lightning. The first 5 years the tower
took 3 visually verified, direct hits each year. It's only taken two
since then. How many unverified hits? Who knows, but I thought for a
while I had a lightning magnet. Since installing the elaborate ground
system and grounding the coax shield at the top and bottom of the tower
I've had no damage to any equipment or coax even with all those hits.
Connectors "up there" look pretty ratty but are still working.
BTW, after one storm I found some large pieces of tape and coax seal in
the yard. They looked a lot like expanded metal. So tape and seal in
hand, or rather, pocket I headed up the tower. There I found all of the
connectors were bare metal. Most were clean brass that appeared to be
etched, but absolutely no silver plate left on N or UHF. IIRC I had to
throw away one of the UHF connectors as it had to be cut off the coax.
I couldn't get them apart. At least I didn't find any water in the
coax. I replaced the coax seal and tape. They were still working about
7 years later when the new tower went up.
Oh! a while back I had to get started on replacing the pigtails at the
top. Only one connector out of the 5 cables would come apart. I had to
cut all of the others off and no these were not filled with epoxy<:-))
But they were thoroughly weatherproofed with the MMM heat shrink. All
connectors were still shiny, but neither UHF nor N would budge. I
didn't cut any of them apart, but they acted like the threads were
welded...or gauled(sp?).
73
Roger (K8RI)
> After several years of direct exposure I've unscrewed these fittings and
> found everything underneath to be shiny and dry. I've absolutely never
> seen one take in a drop of water (unprotected) if it's the right
> connector, installed on the right cable, so they are compatible.
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