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Date: | Fri, 20 Feb 2004 11:12:32 -0500 |
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Lynn,
I've always liked a Weller soldering gun for that kind of work. The tip
gets quite hot, but it cools off fairly quickly. I also like to put the
connector into a vice just to keep it from moving around. I've never seen
a coax cable stripper, but I think I'll have to check one out.
Steve
On Thursday 2/19/04 23:46 Lynn Roberts N8LXK wrote:
>Jody,
>I believe with a coax stripper, you could just take the outer jacket off
>an rg-58 or an rg-8 rf cable. Radio Shack carries 278-248 Deluxe Coax
>Cable Stripper. It should work for you. But don't use BNC coax
>connectors from Radio Shack for use with RG-58. As far as I know theirs
>don't allow for soldering. Their PL-259 plugs are available in solder
>and no-solder versions. Applied properly the solder version should work.
>
>I'm sighted so I use a 100 watt iron for use with PL-259's and a 30 watt
>iron for use with BNC and general pc board soldering. However they don't
>make an iron with a heat shielded element that I know of, maybe somebody
>on the list does.
>The tip gets very hot. Soldering gun tips also get hot.
>Lynn
>[log in to unmask]
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Blind-Hams For blind ham radio operators
>[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Jody W Ianuzzi
>Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2004 10:30 PM
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Re: help with soldering iron selection
>
>
>I am also interested in soldering information. I have been told that I
>can't strip a coax and solder a connecter because I can't see the
>layers. I never accept this excuse and I wonder what other people have
>done to adapt to this problem.
>
>73s
>JODY
>KB1DCS
>
>
>"WE MUST BE THE CHANGE WE WISH
>TO SEE IN THE WORLD" ~ Gandhi
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