I stopped soldering connectors quite a few years ago and have gone to crimp connections. Properly done, a crimp connection will make a gas-tight seal and will be at least as reliable as a soldered connection. It takes a bit less time than soldering and you don't have to worry about melting the center conductor insulation (a real problem with RG-174). Plus, if you are out in the backyard, you don't have to run a long extension cord or use a butane-powered soldering iron to install a connector.

Some connectors I use, such as the bulkhead SMA female cablejacks that are part of the Z10000 buffer amplifier kit, require soldering the center conductor, but the shield is crimped.

For PL259-style connectors, both the center pin and shell can be crimped, along with some BNCs and N connectors. Others are center-pin solder, shell crimp design.

In crimping the connector, it's critical that the tool used have the correct die dimension and that you have stripped the shell and center conductor to the manufacturer-specified length.

I did 150 crimp connections of rather small cable (some RG174 and some Teflon coax that makes RG174 look large) recently and had one bad connection, which was due to my error putting the connector into the wrong die in the crimping tool.

I paid about $100 for my ratcheting-type crimping tool and two extra die sets, but I see imported knock-offs with full die sets for a fraction of that price now.


Jack K8ZOA
www.cliftonlaboratories.com


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