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Do I need male or female BNC connector?
Dumb question...
If I am coupling my coax cable to the xpdr and com antennas, will I need to fit a male or female coupling to my cable? I was told by my local expert that I needed a male fitting on the end of my coax to mate with the female fitting on the antennas (antennae?) I ordered male fittings and received the following part- Amphenol 36800-RFX. It does not mate up. Ideas? Thanks in advance! Tinman |
Female cables
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My experience is also that female connectors are required to mate to antennas, and to pig tails from radio trays. I think your "local expert" gave you bad information.
Pete |
Thanks guys. Looks like my local expert needs some additional training...Too bad that he is my brother-in-law.
Tinman |
Your backwards
You guys are cracking me up.
Fittings on the coax need to be MALE Male center pin from coax end goes into the female receiver of the antennae. Hello? Buy some females anyway since you will probably have some coupling to do in varous places like the wing or pig tails off avionics stack. Kahuna |
yep.
I agree with Kahuna. People sometimes get mixed up between the concept that the male part is that of the conductor pin, but the outside metal casing is kind of female. When purchasing these things, I think you're talking about whether the conductor is male or female. Not the "connector" shell.
But I'm not an electrical engineer :) |
The gender of an electrical connector is determined by the center conductor. The BNC connector on the cable should be male. The connectors on the antenna and transponder, radio, etc. are female.
Mel...DAR |
When I get confused I just look down. The male variety has the center pin, just like us fellas.
Steve Zicree RV4 |
Apologies to your brother-in-law ... you learn something everyday.
Pete |
I had fun when I tried to mate up the two at my disconnect point at the wing root. for my Archer wingtip antennae.
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