Home    Article Archive    Feed    Contact    Search

Popular Articles
Nieto Knives
Waring Commercial
Mason Jar Candle Holder
Pink Polka Dot Apron
Beauty Supply Aprons
Corelle Country Cottage
Acrylic Dinnerware
Kitchenware Direct

Other Sites
Mission Yard
Curt Yard
Safety Freaks
Kitchen Forest
Children Sets
Dull Home
Home Big
Law Blog
Media Grids
Owners Mortgage
Realestate Abode
Real Estate Bar

Marketplace

Cable Splicer

Posted on April 23, 2010.
Cable SplicerCoaxial cable-splicer?

I have an RG58 / U 50ohm coaxial cable, and I bought a splicer support radio said RG58/59 FIS. If I buy an RG58 / U 50ohm cable line and connect the cable to another cable splicer with my signal is still good?

This is an antenna.

it is best to use a connector for the cable
it is difficult to maintain the return loss (game) with an O
the more often the most critical
even for a receiver, it will be some bumps in the frequency response that may have no effect meaning that if you do the measures

a transmitter, it can cause failure of output devices


Anita

I never thought you could coax connection and maintain a good impedance matching. I would have to see the splicer and splice it produces. I doubt.

"Is that your signal remains good" depends on the signal frequency. The higher the frequency, the best of the junction should be.

Basically, a coaxial cable is a central conductor of a specified diameter, surrounded by an insulating material (dielectric constant specified) and is surrounded by a shield or ground wire. Every where I used the word "specified" means that if your cable deviates from this, it has an offset to the signal that causes reflections and losses.

To the extent that it deviates from the junction, thus the junction is poor. It's kind of vague, but again, frequency is important. 10 MHz, you can get by with a lot of lag. 500 MHz, very little.

.

Share |

Comments

There are no comments.

Leave a Comment

Your Name
Your Email
Comments
Human Check. Type 9508.