On 5/2/2022 9:12 AM, Grant Saviers wrote:
Lots of wisdom here.
Braid coverage matters.
Yes.
Commercially double braid or hardline (solid Cu
shield) is used for jumpers. For hams, the RG8 size "foil plus braid"
is the economical choice if from a reputable brand/supplier.
In the second edition of his landmark book on stubs, W2VJN noted
measured degradation of foil/braid LMR400 HF stubs left in his garage
for 10 years.
DXEng also
sells double braid TFE mini coax jumpers which, while expensive, are
very handy for rig to amp to filter jumpers. Or buy the bulk RG400
(stranded center) or RG142 (solid center) TFE silver plated double braid
and make your own.
There's a reason why coax like this is used in serious installations. A
measure of shielding effectiveness is Transfer Impedance, the ratio of
differential voltage induced inside the cable by shield current on the
outside of the shield. The components are the resistance of the shield
at the frequency of interest and the quality (density, uniformity) of
the shield. DC resistance of the shield, which is multiplied by skin
effect, establishes the lower limit.
The ultimate, of course, is hard line.
Another fact often lost is that unless it's damaged by intrusion of
moisture, loss in coax below about 500 MHz is all due to resistance of
center conductor and shield.
73, Jim K9YC
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