New- Hints And Kinks | For The Radio Amateur

73, and may your SWR be low and your soldering iron hot. Do you have a kink to share? Send it to your club newsletter or post it on QRZ—that’s how our tradition stays alive.

Now get on the air—and keep the hints coming. 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). 73, and may your SWR be low and your soldering iron hot

Remove the knob. Drip 2–3 drops of isopropyl alcohol (91% or higher) into the shaft opening. Rotate the pot back and forth fully 20–30 times. Let it dry 5 minutes. Then add one tiny drop of lightweight machine oil (sewing machine oil or even 3-in-1) to the same spot. Rotate again 10 times. Now get on the air—and keep the hints coming

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.

Not always, but in a pinch, stranded 18-gauge wire soaked in flux outperforms no wick at all. Keep a 6" piece pre-fluxed in a tiny ziplock bag in your go-kit. 3. The "Eyeglass" SMA Wrench (Free & Perfect) The problem: SMA connectors need to be finger tight plus 1/8 turn . Overtighten, and you’ll snap the center pin or ruin the female receptacle (especially on cheap HTs or SDR dongles).

Use vulcanizing silicone tape (often sold as "rescue tape" or "self-fusing silicone tape"). It’s about $8–10 per roll. Stretch it 100% as you wrap—it fuses to itself into a solid rubber sleeve.