The SMA connector is not very strong compared to the BNC. The short cable 
adapter you have is likely a better idea.

Joe Della Barba
Coquina
C&C 35 MK I
From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of 
honeys...@aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 26, 2013 8:16 AM
To: billb...@sbcglobal.net; cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Hand held radio antenna adaptor

All,

Thanks for the support. We made up a 2 foot section of co-ax with a SMA connect 
on 1 end and a female 259 connector on the other end. Problem solved and the 
total costs was less than USD 15.00.

I do have to wonder why no one (that I could locate) makes a simple one piece 
connector for these hand held radios so that you can use the HH as an emergency 
back up. Strange..

Thanks again for the hot and steamy deep Southern USA

Jack Fitzgerald
C&C 39TM
HONEY
US12788

In a message dated 6/26/2013 7:44:11 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
billb...@sbcglobal.net<mailto:billb...@sbcglobal.net> writes:
Although Neill-Concelman is technically and pedantically correct, overwhelming 
common usage is Navy or Naval. Yes, I am a long time licensed electronic tech.  
If you expect the majority of people including Radio Technicians to understand 
what you want, you call it a Bayonet Naval Connector or Threaded Naval 
Connector.  Now that you have googled BNC to find a wikipedia entry, try 
googling Navy Connector, and see what you find. A large number of electronic 
techs came from the U.S. Navy electronics division, and the Navy manuals are 
used in many civilian electronics schools. So there is a very strong "naval" 
connection to electronics, and especially radios.  :-)

Bill Bina
PS. Backronym? Please find THAT in a legitimate dictionary! =-O




On 6/25/2013 11:50 PM, Marek Dziedzic wrote:

Bill,

You wish everything is related to sailing (don’t you?). The BNC stands for 
Bayonet Neill–Concelman connector after two guys who invented it (from Bell 
Labs and Amphenol). The “naval connector” (British or Bayonet) is a backronym. 
The BNC connectors are widely used outside of marine applications and their use 
on boats (sail or otherwise) is secondary.

Marek (in Ottawa).




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