Posts Tagged ‘rca’

Compression Connectors

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Compression Connectors
Do you know about Cable Joints?

I want to terminate a 25mm cable in a distribution board. The board wont take termination bigger than 10mm. I intend to use cable compression connectors to reduce cable size to 10mm or a scotch-cast. Can you advice the implication of this i.e voltage between the feed and point of connection to the joint.
I feel this will be irrelevant because i intend to run the 100mm for 3-5m then join it to the 25mm cable before the cable starts its long run.
Kindly advice please.

You question is a little confusing. If your board will not take the 25mm cable then it will not likely take the current that the cable is rated for. On the other side of things, by reducing your cable size at any point will reduce its current carrying capacity.

I have experienced times where the cable size has been increased because of volt drop and so doesn’t actually require its full current carrying capacity. In this case, it may be OK to reduce it at some point providing the source protection will not allow the current to exceed the “reduced” point. The problem is that I don’t know of any recognised connectors to do this so your best bet would be to get a board that will take your cable and avoid any risk.

How to Video on the ICM Compression Double Bubble BNC connector for security CCTV camera coax cable.




Compression Coax

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Compression Coax
1996 Yamaha pw80 revs fine in first gear through full range – mid range in 2nd & 3rd it begins to lose power?

pw80 revs fine in first gear through full range – mid range in 2nd & 3rd it begins to lose power – as if not enough fuel or air getting in. If you turn throttle on & off, I can coax the engine revs up – but will die if I go on full throttle. replaced carb already. Same problem. Air filter clean, gas tank vent clear. Compression problem? Reed valve? any other ideas?

May need a top end rebuild (cylinder, piston & rings).
2 stroke engines need to be rebuilt quite often.
If it’s never been rebuilt, have it checked.

How to Video on the ICM compression security BNC connector for CCTV camera coax cable.




Bnc Rca

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Bnc Rca
Can I make a coaxial cable, where there is a "BNC" connector on one end and an "F" connector at the other end?

Once Moreover, I am trying to connect a DVR surveillance system to an old TV that has only an F connector on the back, and I wonder if video transfer and / or audio correctly …. not that I'm cheap, but I am faced with many situations where I have to convert to or from VGA, s-video, DVI, RCA, BNC, etc. …. For So I'm trying to figure out exactly what can be connected to what you! For answers

As I said in another posting, if any, BNC is used instead a composite (RCA). As you guessed, you need a BNC-to-RCA adapter and a simple RF modulator with RCA coaxial input and out.

Asianwolf 150 foot BNC to RCA Cable with Power Line



Rca Crimp

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Rca Crimp
CABLES RCA, I was wondering if someone could fix two separate pieces of the RCA cables together?

I have two separate pieces of the RCA cables, each piece is about 6 feet long and you need a piece 12 feet long. To do this, I have to connect them together and instead of buying "Jack Couplers" I would like to repair or crimped together. However, I am not sure if this is possible and I will not cut the cable and pull the box again only to discover that I am unable to connect them together. So if someone could help me I thank you, thank you.

If this can be done, but for all the work you would have to do better with couplers or buy a new cable. RCA cables are protected with a tissue type of wire around the center wire is your positive shielded cable is your negitive. If shielded cable is not is spliced properly get a buzz, which means that the positive is not properly shielded. So unless your good experience in the fine fine wire mesh it may be easier to make down payments or a new track. It is easier to put new plugs on the ends than it is to splice. Even with foil wraping around the joint may get a buzz but not so bad hum.

Important Accessories for Your Car Stereo



Compression Connectors

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

Compression Connectors
How do I view the signal generated by an electric guitar?

I have an electric guitar and trying to see (not hear) the signal passes through various effects pedals (compression, distortion, wha-wha, etc.). Generally, electrical signals can be viewed with an oscilloscope. My point is: is there a special tool designed specifically for viewing on the output of the electric guitar? (taking into account the different connectors, range of frequencies, etc.)

Probably the most practical way forward would be to record the guitar with your computer and then open the files in an editing program audio. If you have a headphone jack adapter on the amp, you can use a 1 / 4 "mono male to 1 / 8" inch male mono cable (or similarly combined adapters) and connect directly to the soundcard input. Set the device manager for sound input use, record the signal with the program audio editing. I use Sound Forge, but there are probably still free versions of Cool Edit Pro, floating on the web. I do not think you will do much in real time as the display is gone, but one to stop recording, you can see the sign easily and adjust the window to show different amounts of time and volume. Hopefully that helps!

New BNC Compression Connectors