vhf PL259 connector male or female

FairweatherDave

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Just a quickie. Not at the boat and I need to establish if the PL259 connector from the aerial is likely to be male or female? Thanks for any answers :)
 
It could be useful to know that PL259 is always male. The corresponding female connector is SO239.
The former is always installed on the cable, the latter on the equipment (radio, aerial...)
 
Thanks.That's useful.
I have had a problem setting up my AIS receiver using an active splitter. The suggestion from Quark is to bypass the splitter and try the vhf aerial direct into the Quark (for diagnosis of its limited range problem). But that requires a BNC plug.
 
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Obviously if you can test your AIS on the mast top antenna (no splitter) then that should prove your problem of short range. However I think splitters are a bad thing. What is best is another antenna on the stern rail for the AIS. However you need to set up cables and plugs so that this antenna can be used for the VHF com radio in case of top antenna failure or mast failure.
Now an antenna is not a hard thing to DIY. You need 17 inches of rod SS or bronze that you can attach the centre of the coax to. You need a way of mounting and insulating this from the rail and a connection of the outer braid to the rail at the base. 100_6759scaled.jpg (83.8 KB) The VHF is on the right the antenna on the left was 27mhz but now long gone. The VHF is my main antenna and works really well. Obviously if you cna raise the base higher you get better range. olewill
 

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