Dennis Pogson wrote:
Peter Hendra wrote:
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 11:52:27 -0400, Theo Weber
wrote:
When I first purchased this instrument, it came with a small
connection box that connected the instrument wiring together.
However, I didn't like the box since the wires are so small and the
whole set up seemed very fiddly and time consuming when it came time
to step the mast. This season, I bought a small $12 5-pin male and
female connector and soldered the wires.
Now I'm finding that wires don't stay connected very well since
the connector is quite small and the amount of solder I can apply is
minimal. I'm thinking I need a connector that has a push fit wire
insertion method instead of solder. I spoke with CMC Electronics,
the Ontario Raymarine service facility, and they have a PNP
off-shore connector for about $35., which seems somewhat pricey.
Does anyone have any experience with another solution. Cheers
Theo
My Raytheon wind did not come with any connection box. I cut the
cable beneath the mast (inside the cabin) and joined it using a
connector strip - the cheap hardware ones that you screw the wire to.
The wires were tinned, the whole thing secured from the weather in a
air-tight electronics box. Have had no problems whatsoever.
For the Raytheon radar, did the same thing, only longer strip and
larger box. I cut wires across the cable at an angle so that
unsheiled area would not be too long.
I do the same, but use a film canister, Kodak or Fuji or any other. By
drilling each end of this plastic box ((one end plus the lid) making
it a very tight fit for the sheath of the multicore cable, I can
create a watertight box by simply taping the lid on. Push the 2 ends
of the cable thru the holes, knot the cables to prevent pulling out,
make your joins, then put the lid on and seal, it's as simple as that
BTW, save those film canisters, they are rapidly becoming an endangered
species with the advent of digital photography!
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