New- Hints And Kinks For The Radio Amateur -
This is for RF ground and equipment bonding , not for lightning or AC safety ground. Always keep your AC safety ground separate and intact. 8. Silicone Baking Mat = Portable Work Surface The problem: Tiny screws, washers, and springs roll off your bench and into the abyss (also known as the carpet).
Tighten until it stops with light finger force, then use the screwdriver for no more than 10 degrees of additional rotation. 4. Cheap Coax Seal That Doesn’t Turn to Gum The problem: High-end coax sealing tape (Coax-Seal, etc.) works great, but it’s expensive and gets sticky-messy in heat.
Now get on the air—and keep the hints coming. New- Hints and Kinks for the Radio Amateur
Loosen the element set screw. Slide the element until it touches the clamp. Tighten. Check SWR. Move clamp up or down by measured inches. No more lowering the mast 15 times. 6. Cleaning Potentiometers Without Deoxit (Field Hack) The problem: Scratchy volume or tone control on your vintage receiver, and you’re out of contact cleaner.
Zero adhesive residue. Removes cleanly. UV and weatherproof for years. Temperature range: -60°F to +500°F. One roll seals dozens of connectors. Use it over electrical tape, not under. 5. The Ruler-on-the-Mast Trick (Antenna Matching) The problem: You’re tuning a 1/4-wave ground plane or a J-pole. You slide the radiator up and down, mark it with a Sharpie, lower the mast, adjust, raise again… repeat. This is for RF ground and equipment bonding
Stick a metal ruler (12" or 24") directly to the fiberglass or wooden mast using double-sided foam tape, aligned vertically with the antenna element. Use a small spring clamp or a plastic clothespin on the ruler as a temporary stop.
Use rare earth magnets (neodymium, 1/2" diameter or larger) with a screw hole in the center. Screw a copper ground lug directly to the magnet. Stick the magnet to the metal desk. Connect all your gear grounds to that lug via short straps. Silicone Baking Mat = Portable Work Surface The
Let’s face it: half the fun of amateur radio is the tinkering. We love solving the little problems—the RF in the shack, the cable mess behind the desk, the soldering iron that’s never hot when you need it. Here’s a fresh batch of hints and kinks to save you time, money, and frustration. The problem: You slip a ferrite bead over a coax cable, but it rattles around and slides right off the bend. Not effective.