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Thanks Chuck
Had not seen that one ..interesting will do some more research
The other lesson I have learned recently is to take great care that 
with  the little locking bumps inside the PL259 males that one must take 
some care in making sure they fit into the matching V's of the female 
connector. They with get on the top of the V rather than down in the V 
and you think they are tight and then two months of temperature cycling 
you have an intermittent. PL259 L, T and Barrels are more prone to not 
seat properly than the standard PL259 on the end of a coax. I had one of 
these get so hot when running full legal limit on 6M that it would get 
hot enough to burn you !! 
Dave
NR1DX
On 10/15/2020 12:39 PM, Chuck Gooden wrote:
 
Dave,
When you wrap the connectors again, do not use COAX Seal
Have you seen this video?� https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcHiHCw0lsY
I used a procedure similar to this when I was in the Navy on the HF 
and UHF coax connectors.� I used a couple of tie wraps to hold the end 
of the tape down.� The Scotch 2228 is not sticky but it sticks to 
itself.� You need to stretch it some as you wrap in around the 
connector and cable.� It comes off easy by taking a razor blade and 
slicing it and peeling it off. 
Chuck K9LC
On 10/15/2020 7:27 AM, Artek Manuals wrote:
 A couple of weeks ago I asked for some ideas on how to remove soft 
black water sealant for connectors I commonly know as Coaxiseal.
Several good answers� and thanks to all who replied.
The "Best" results IMO were
1) "Wait till it gets cold and peel it right off" . I was skeptical 
in Florida that it would ever get that cold but turns out that even 
at 68 degrees which It was the morning I climbed the tower last week 
that the stuff becomes significantly less "gooey" and I was able to 
peel 90% of it off fairly quickly so I can imagine for most of you 
farther north that this will work well 
2) For the final 10% left from the myriad of suggestions I got that 
the stuff will succumb to just about any solvent. For doing the final 
shiny cleanup I found mineral spirits works very well as one of the 
least toxic of the many suggestions. Also much to my surprise 
isopropyl alcohol , while not quite a fast acting
as the mineral spirits did a very good job of cleaning the final 
residue of type-N and PL259 connectors 
3) For the future,� the suggestion of wrapping the connectors with 
tape first before applying the sealing junk was a real duhh moment 
which I now use going forward.. I go well down on the coax, fold the 
tape over at the end and I have an easy removal "tab" for� the next time. 
Tnxs again
Dave
NR1DX
 
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Dave Manuals@ArtekManuals.com www.ArtekManuals.com
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