Praxinoscope
Well-Known Member
Bought one years ago, took it out of its container once to check it, since then it has lived in a locker, it's one of those things like liferafts, flares etc. that you buy but hope you don't have to use.
The plug may be plated with something incompatible like chromium.On the same theme. I'm just changing the antenna on my AIS and needed to change the co-ax plug to a PL259.
The plug won't take solder and the cable braided screen is reluctant to accept it. I know the solder is ok, used the same roll many times before, flux cored. Anyone else had this problem. The plug (BNC) I cut off the co-ax to replace was crimped on and not soldered. Any ideas?
The plug (BNC) I cut off the co-ax to replace was crimped on and not soldered. Any ideas?
I would have suggested buying a BNC-PL259 adaptor.
Talking to an ex air sea rescue pilot I asked what, in his opinion, was the best bit of kit to carry for emergency use. he said an emergency VHF aerial. We went out and bought one the following week. For some 10years it moved from one end of the locker to another as we tut tutted about the cost and space for something we never used.....then. We were hit by lightning in an isolated lagoon in Belize and lost all our instruments. It gave us a much needed ability to assure friends we were ok and the knowledge we could get help if needed as we made our way pretty much blind to Guatemala. As I recall it was simple to use and very effective. It's back in the locker again-still being moved on a regular basis but we no longer tut tut at it!
Actually it was last century!I'm an ex-SAR pilot. He's wrong. An epirb will put the aircraft within HH vhf range. Homing onto a VHF voice signal is so last century.
I too made my own AIS receiving aerial from a length of coax and reliably pick up ships at 8 to 10nm and small boats 4 to 5nm. Aerial is 2m above waterline. However, I would not risk a diy aerial to transmit from my vhf radio even as an emergency aerial.Thanks for everyone's input. Not being able to decide between the commercial offerings I decided to defer the decision and for my project construct a DIY dipole antenna using some coax, a pl-259 connector a couple of other bits of wire and a soldering iron. I didn't need particularly good reception: I was investigating an issue someone was having sending data to marinetraffic and had acquired a dAISy HAT to experiment with but as I only have a narrow view of the thames from my 1st floor balcony (surrounding buildings are taller than that) I was really only expecting to pick up boats passing that narrow gap. As it happens I seem to be picking up boats the other side of blackfriars bridge 6km away.
My DIY antenna isn't robust enough to be good "emergency antenna" but it's been a good learning experience. Moreover having always been more Jobs than Wozinak in my sartorial sensibilities I've never really understood the computer geek stereotype. Having watched a bunch of youtube videos on antenna construction by socially awkward men with excess facial hair and bad fashion sense I suspect the general public are confusing computer geeks with radio geeks.
I too made my own AIS receiving aerial from a length of coax and reliably pick up ships at 8 to 10nm and small boats 4 to 5nm. Aerial is 2m above waterline. However, I would not risk a diy aerial to transmit from my vhf radio even as an emergency aerial.
www.solocoastalsailing.co.uk