EEVblog Electronics Community Forum
General => General Technical Chat => Topic started by: gamalot on August 10, 2024, 11:38:22 am
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I am curious what this "BNC Jack to BNC Plug Adapter" is used for?
https://www.amphenolrf.com/112667.html (https://www.amphenolrf.com/112667.html)
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It doesn't seem to be a feed-through terminator, so I'm not sure. :-//
MOD:
I wonder if this is for a BNC connector directly from the internal unit to the outside of the enclosure. This may reduce losses since no cables are used.
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I can envision a few uses:
1. Port saver. For some jack that gets plugged/unplugged constantly, leave the extender on the device so it wears out, and once it does, just replace the extender.
2. Connecting things without cables. Lots of things like filters, amplifiers and attenuators, exist as little metal boxes for inline use, with a male BNC on one side and a female on the other. To connect those directly onto the input of a piece of test gear, you might need a few cm of extension to get around the case or knobs or something.
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Tooki is on the money with a port / connector / pin saver. On equipment which sees a lot of mating cycles, you install sacrificial male/female adapters so the connectors in the equipment itself doesn't wear out.
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Tooki is on the money with a port / connector / pin saver. On equipment which sees a lot of mating cycles, you install sacrificial male/female adapters so the connectors in the equipment itself doesn't wear out.
yes a sacrificial port saver. For some jack that gets plugged & unplugged constantly.
I use a USB extension as a port saver on my TV for daily portable HDD use.
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yes a sacrificial port saver. For some jack that gets plugged & unplugged constantly. I use a USB extension as a port saver on my TV for daily portable HDD use.
Both Samsung phones I've had, S7 & S8, have had the USB connector fail. Had I known I would have glued with hot glue a pigtail in place.
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yes a sacrificial port saver. For some jack that gets plugged & unplugged constantly. I use a USB extension as a port saver on my TV for daily portable HDD use.
Both Samsung phones I've had, S7 & S8, have had the USB connector fail. Had I known I would have glued with hot glue a pigtail in place.
This is precisely why I use wireless charging where possible. I recall someone one told me this was a silly idea; Not only can it prolong battery life (limited currant charging) but ports do wear out.
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Many laboratory devices also have recessed sockets when inside a 19"-cabinet or other modular crate. Sometimes having 3cm more makes a big difference.
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Both Samsung phones I've had, S7 & S8, have had the USB connector fail. Had I known I would have glued with hot glue a pigtail in place.
Not sure whether the connector would have better chances of survival if you keep carrying the phone around with a 3 cm lever permanently installed in the USB port?
I guess it's a gamble: Either slowly wear off the contacts by frequent plugging and unplugging, or catastrophically break the plastic tab in the connector (or tear the whole connector off the PCB) when the plug gets caught on something...
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yes a sacrificial port saver. For some jack that gets plugged & unplugged constantly. I use a USB extension as a port saver on my TV for daily portable HDD use.
Both Samsung phones I've had, S7 & S8, have had the USB connector fail. Had I known I would have glued with hot glue a pigtail in place.
That’s almost guaranteed to be worse, because you now have a big lever attached to the port at all times.
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This is precisely why I use wireless charging where possible. I recall someone one told me this was a silly idea; Not only can it prolong battery life (limited currant charging) but ports do wear out.
Same here. I get rubber port covers and leave them in the USB-C port. This protected it from lint and dust so that on the rare occasion when I need the USB port it is clean and functional. USB-C is definitely an improvement over micro-B in terms of longevity but it can still wear out.
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A delay line; approximately 127 ps!
Based on a 2/3s factor of the speed of light in a vacuum. That is a common factor for coaxial cable.
But more likely used as a connector protector.
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This is precisely why I use wireless charging where possible. I recall someone one told me this was a silly idea; Not only can it prolong battery life (limited currant charging) but ports do wear out.
The S7 at the end would only charge via wireless and I had to download photos via Bluetooth. I did not mind the wireless charging so much but the BT was a PITA and I could not use a protective cover.
Now I am using the S8 and same thing, the reason I do not use wireless charging is because I want to use the protective cover.
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Protect your holes!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdgfFlchLpM (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdgfFlchLpM)
Anyway if >1GHz makes perfectly sense... for scopes inputs... I would not do it.
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i would say port saver for sure .... i use N-types models to save the connectors on Siglent and Rigols spectrum analyzers ...
and N-type to BNC and N-type to SMA, after 300 inserts i dump them and put a new port saver ....
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"Ports do wear out"
With over 45 years of professional use of BNC connectors (over 57 years if you count my retirement) I have NEVER seen a BNC jack wear out. I have seen some that were ripped from the PCB but worn out? NO! To me it looks like a lever arm to amplify any sudden force coming from the cable that someone tripped on. That would make things worse, not better.
I don't know about some of the modern, ultra miniature jacks on things like cell phones. But I suspect they last longer than the cell phone itself does.
I think this is a solution looking for a problem - that it won't ever find.
Of course, YMMV.
yes a sacrificial port saver. For some jack that gets plugged & unplugged constantly. I use a USB extension as a port saver on my TV for daily portable HDD use.
Both Samsung phones I've had, S7 & S8, have had the USB connector fail. Had I known I would have glued with hot glue a pigtail in place.
This is precisely why I use wireless charging where possible. I recall someone one told me this was a silly idea; Not only can it prolong battery life (limited currant charging) but ports do wear out.