I would not use those cheap adapters. They're made overseas (Taiwan I
think) and fall apart easily. I had the same problem a couple of years ago
as all my outdoor connections use N connectors and I needed an adapter for a
vertical. The adapters I got did the same thing when tightened.
Go to RF Connections website and look up the MIL spec adapters. These will
not fail but are pricier ($8.50) each.
That should do the trick.
73,
Jim N9WW
James Chaggaris
President
PowerOne Corp.
1020 Cedar Avenue
Suite 110
St. Charles, IL 60174
Phn: 630-443-6500
Fax: 630-443-6505
Cell: 630-669-2241
www.pwrone.com
-----Original Message-----
From: towertalk-bounces@contesting.com
[mailto:towertalk-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of n2oelspears@aol.com
Sent: Monday, May 19, 2008 7:22 AM
To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: [TowerTalk] PL-259 to N Female Adapter on a Comet GP-9 Antenna
I am trying to install a Comet GP-9 Antenna using LMR-400 Coax that has N
Males on each end.? I bought the Antenna from a reputable local dealer.? I
asked him for a Comet GP-9N, but, he did not have one in stock.? He told me
it would be no problem to use a PL-259 to N Female Adapter, and he gave me
one? to use? on the antenna.
I? installed the adapter by tightening it firmly, and then firmly connected
the LMR-400 cable.? When I tried to? waterproof the cable with coax seal,
the adapter broke.? The PL-259 ring separated from the body.? I assumed I
had tightened the adapter too tight.? I obtained another adapter, and tried
again.? This time I carefully finger tightened the PL-259 ring.? I finger
tightened the N Male, and started to wrap the coax seal.? The adapter broke
again.? I figured out that it was due to the stiffness of the LMR-400.? The
leverage of the stiff cable rips the adapter apart.? Doe anyone have any
ideas for a fix?
The package brags that the GP-9 antenna is rated for 200 watts. As an
omni-directional antenna, it is obviously aimed at FM Simplex and Repeater
users.? However, the instruction sheet rates it at 200 watts SSB, not FM.?
It was my impression that SSB ratings are about 4 times that of a AM or FM
rating. I would then assume that a 200 watt SSB rating would give a maximum
FM power rating of about 50 watts.? Am I correct in this assumption?
I asked the US Distributor that type of question via email.? Their reply
email is below.? The only change I made in copying this email, was in my
changing my email address to protect me against spam.
-----Original Message-----
From: MickStwernik <micks@cometantenna.com>
To: n2oel@aol.com
Sent: Tue, 13 May 2008 2:07 pm
Subject: Re: GP-9 Data Sheet
The FM rating of the GP-9 is 100W FM, 200W
SSB.
?
Depending on the duty cycle, 160W will probably
damage the antenna.
?
Mick Stwertnik
NCG Company
15036 Sierra Bonita Lane
Chino,
CA? 91710-8901
800-962-2611
909-393-6133
Fax?
909-393-6136
www.cometantenna.com
----- Original Message -----
From:
n2oel@aol.com
To: sales@natcommgroup.com
Sent: 2008-05-12 07:27 PM
Subject: GP-9 Data Sheet
http://www.visradio.com/dwg/ncg/gp-9.gif
What
is the FM Power Handling capability of the GP-9?? The data sheet says 200
Watts SSB, which is about 50 Watts FM power.?? I want to use the
antenna with a 160 Watt Mirage amplifier on FM Simplex at 146.58 Mhz.? Is
this wise, or will I be melting the antenna?
Noel Spears?
N2OEL
Plan your next roadtrip with MapQuest.com: America's #1 Mapping Site.
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