Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Of course, all this Raymarine propaganda is moot when you consider the
cheap-assed little plastic connector you have to shove through the plastic stuffing tube and plug into the chinzy board connector inside the radome.....If signals will pass through a chinzy plastic 10-cent connector, a good terminal block, with RING terminals thank you, not spade lugs, is like comparing a C-class Benz to the Yugo connector in the dome...(c; Wonder what ever happened to those nice green mil-spec bulkhead connectors that were SEALED against the seawater, dammit....(d^ ![]() Larry W4CSC "maxlynn" wrote in news:QMhfc.8563$dZ1.6836@fed1read04: Interesting question. Raymarine had at one time strictly recommended against breaking their radar cable and adding an in-line connector anyway, anytime. I did it with a cheap ten pin connector on an SL-72, and had no problem for several years. I then took that radar from one boat to another boat, and after reading the FAQ's on their web site, which grudgingly admitted that a terminal board or connector was possible, substituted a terminal board for the old connector. I was unable to get the radar to work until I replaced the terminal board with another connector. I sense that these connections are indeed sensitive. I'm not sure which lines are sensitive, but suspect that it's the coax leads. Max Lynn |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
OB Motor steering question | General | |||
batteries, and battery cable installation. | Cruising | |||
Video Interface Cable. Furuno RP-110 <> Furuno Radar | Electronics | |||
Radar Cable Connectors | Electronics | |||
WTB: Radar Cable for Raytheon R20 | Electronics |