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#1
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Hi all.. So, while installing my transducer ( DST50 Standard Horizon) I put
a staple from a staple gun into the cable. Brilliant, I know. Of course the depth finder stopped reading depths so.. I'm guessing the cable is very sensitive and I wont be able to repair the cable by cutting and splicing it can I? I gave this a shot with no luck but I just did a quick cut & splice job to see if I would get any sort of reading... Shielding and other factors to be considered I assume? Thanks, David |
#2
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... Hi all.. So, while installing my transducer ( DST50 Standard Horizon) I put a staple from a staple gun into the cable. Brilliant, I know. Of course the depth finder stopped reading depths so.. I'm guessing the cable is very sensitive and I wont be able to repair the cable by cutting and splicing it can I? I gave this a shot with no luck but I just did a quick cut & splice job to see if I would get any sort of reading... Shielding and other factors to be considered I assume? Thanks, David Splicing is certainly possible. And, yes, the cable is, as you say, "sensitive", and the splice won't do it a whole lot of good. One must splice not only the center conductor, but the shield as well. Providing a little more shielding over the splice won't hurt a thing, and may well prevent the sounder's noise from leaking out into other things. (radios, loran, gps etc). Just remember the added aluminum foil (or whatever) added over the splice must be connected to the cable's shield. Should work, though. Old Chief Lynn |
#3
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I concur with Chief Lynn
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#4
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Gotta be very careful though -- with analog transducers, the length of
the cable is figured into the delay time which is what the souonder uses to work out the depth. Might have to recalibrate. Michael Porter "Lynn Coffelt" wrote: Splicing is certainly possible. And, yes, the cable is, as you say, "sensitive", and the splice won't do it a whole lot of good. One must splice not only the center conductor, but the shield as well. Providing a little more shielding over the splice won't hurt a thing, and may well prevent the sounder's noise from leaking out into other things. (radios, loran, gps etc). Just remember the added aluminum foil (or whatever) added over the splice must be connected to the cable's shield. Should work, though. Old Chief Lynn Michael Porter Naval Architect / Boatbuilder mporter at mp-marine dot com www.mp-marine.com *** Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com *** |
#5
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"Michael Porter" wrote in message
... Gotta be very careful though -- with analog transducers, the length of the cable is figured into the delay time which is what the souonder uses to work out the depth. Might have to recalibrate. No it's not. The delay in a coax cable is next to nothing compared to the delay in water. It's the capacity of the cable which is part of the resonant circuit that drives the transducer. Meindert |
#6
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Hey David,
I did the same thing once - tried to splice, with shielding in mind, to no avail. Still seems to me like it ought to be possible if you make a good soldered connection, but it's pretty difficult to get the shielding back right. Anyway, I never could make it work. Know this doesn't help - but thought it might make you feel better that someone else did it too ![]() Daniel |
#7
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In article ,
Michael Porter wrote: Gotta be very careful though -- with analog transducers, the length of the cable is figured into the delay time which is what the souonder uses to work out the depth. Might have to recalibrate. Michael Porter There is NO difference between how a digital and analog Depthsounder determines depth. It is all done by timing the ultrasonic transmit pulse leaving the transmitter, with the reflected received pulse in the receiver. The difference is how the information is displayed to the human operator. The length of the transducer cable is irrelevent to that timing, as the delay is insignificant when compared to the speed of ultrasonic sound in water, Fresh or Salt. Transducer cables certainly can be spliced. It is a relativly easy process and with the frequencies involved usually less than 400Khz, any introduction of extra capacitance to the transducer cable will usually not cause much change in the Tx/Rx tuning of the sounder circuits themselves. I am sure that Oldtimers, like Lynn, and Larry, have done this MANY times, just to save some boater from having to haul the vessel just because he crushed the tranducer cable by setting an engine block, or battery on it, while futzing around in the bilge. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#8
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![]() "Bruce in Alaska" wrote in message ... In article , Michael Porter wrote: Gotta be very careful though -- with analog transducers, the length of the cable is figured into the delay time which is what the souonder uses to work out the depth. Might have to recalibrate. Michael Porter There is NO difference between how a digital and analog Depthsounder determines depth. It is all done by timing the ultrasonic transmit pulse leaving the transmitter, with the reflected received pulse in the receiver. The difference is how the information is displayed to the human operator. The length of the transducer cable is irrelevent to that timing, as the delay is insignificant when compared to the speed of ultrasonic sound in water, Fresh or Salt. Transducer cables certainly can be spliced. It is a relativly easy process and with the frequencies involved usually less than 400Khz, any introduction of extra capacitance to the transducer cable will usually not cause much change in the Tx/Rx tuning of the sounder circuits themselves. I am sure that Oldtimers, like Lynn, and Larry, have done this MANY times, just to save some boater from having to haul the vessel just because he crushed the tranducer cable by setting an engine block, or battery on it, while futzing around in the bilge. Bruce in alaska -- AMEN Old Chief Lynn |
#9
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David,
Your splice may, in fact, be fine but your depthsounder transmitter may be stuffed. When the staple went into the cable it probably shorted the transducer connection. Instead of pumping a few hundred watts into a transducer with an impedance of a few hundred ohms the depth sounder tried to pump this power into a short and may have damaged the transmitter. Bert "David" wrote in message ... Hi all.. So, while installing my transducer ( DST50 Standard Horizon) I put a staple from a staple gun into the cable. Brilliant, I know. Of course the depth finder stopped reading depths so.. I'm guessing the cable is very sensitive and I wont be able to repair the cable by cutting and splicing it can I? I gave this a shot with no luck but I just did a quick cut & splice job to see if I would get any sort of reading... Shielding and other factors to be considered I assume? Thanks, David |
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