I have watched a lot of videos on this subject lately... ivmust congratulate you on doing such. Clean job!so many videos of folks just wrecking that braided cable and having all these strands poking out of the crimp piece.. whether it makes a difference or it does not, pride in your work goes a lot further than just looking good. Builds integrity! Nice work again. Thanks for the video!
Excellent video sir, my respects, I saw tapes videos to strike out a rj11 and rj59 cable, but none like you, I send you my admiration for exposing your knowledge, a hug from Peru
Hi Bill, Video is good, can you add a view of the crimping tool from the side please.I am particular to see the crimping of centre pin.Some coax have the core wire as multistrand.Can cenre pin crimp well there or do we need to solder with fine tip iron?
Please can you detail the coax stripper used here as had no joy finding one which correctly strips outer sheath and cuts dielectric properly. Looking forward to your reply and many thanks
Sadly, we can't do that. We're an association for the commercial AV industry, and we maintain brand agnosticism and will not endorse a product. What I can and will say is that when Googling a rotary coax stripper (especially if you are using it a lot) is that with any tool, don't go super cheap. You don't necessarily have to go super expensive either. Sorry that that is vague, but we must retain our independence. Any tools used in the videos themselves are strictly for illustrative purposes rather than an endorsement. Hope you find on that works for you!
@@AVIXATV thanks for you prompt reply and advice. I am about up to 1000+ coax/shotgun/power cable run installs and have tried about 8 different coax strippers ranging from £4 UK to about £30 UK. None of which give an adequate braided dielectric section for decent crimping. Most offer 5-8mm braided dielectric section which in my opinion is not good enough for crimping BNC connectors with my CK crimp tool. I shall have stick to my tried and tested method of using a dolphin utility knife of cutting cable sheath and stripping the right amount of dielectric back for centre core pin connection crimp. Once again, thanks for the quick reply
Informative video, I just received my RG59 siamese and some crimp connectors. I crimped the connector like you did and soldered on my power leads. (- to - + to +) and when i connect the camera and cable to the DVR the inferred clicks on the screen stays black and then in the lower corner i have a capital P with a red x and no picture.
My g**d**n stripper keeps cutting too deep at the first blade. It taks off the outter jacker and most of the braided shield. I even have the blade set to shallowest cut. I am using a Paladin LC CST PA1255 on belden 1506 cable.
You don't say how to configure the stripper. anyone can just put the cable in the tool and twist. it's like it just magically works out of the box. It doesn't.
hola buenas, quería adjuntar que este vídeo me parce terrible, voy a acabar con mi vida después de ver este vídeo, ojala el creador de este vídeo al enterarse de la noticia caiga en una terrible depresión que acabe con la muerte, la persona que aparece en el video es la persona mas horrible y tenebrosa que han podido ver mis ojos, saludos desde Guatemala
I always come back to this video when I'm uncertain. I've been using this method with great success. Thank you.
I have watched a lot of videos on this subject lately... ivmust congratulate you on doing such. Clean job!so many videos of folks just wrecking that braided cable and having all these strands poking out of the crimp piece.. whether it makes a difference or it does not, pride in your work goes a lot further than just looking good. Builds integrity!
Nice work again. Thanks for the video!
Thank you, Cody! Those stray strands may seem inconsequential, but they can cause some serious problems if they aren't caught. Glad the video helped!
Pl
Excellent video sir, my respects, I saw tapes videos to strike out a rj11 and rj59 cable, but none like you, I send you my admiration for exposing your knowledge, a hug from Peru
Thank you! Glad we could help!
It's all about the using of proper tool(s). Without it, something will always go wrong.
Cordial greetings from Cuba bring your offers here thanks 👍🇨🇺🇺🇸
Hi Bill, Video is good, can you add a view of the crimping tool from the side please.I am particular to see the crimping of centre pin.Some coax have the core wire as multistrand.Can cenre pin crimp well there or do we need to solder with fine tip iron?
thank you for the great video
Thank you sir for your packaged information
nice and clean
I need to buy that strip tool, what is the name of that?
Tequila
You Alive Now Thomas ❤❤
Bill is still kicking it and enjoying his retirement out in Colorado. ;)
Very good you explain well thank you
Super videjko stando pokračuj
Please can you detail the coax stripper used here as had no joy finding one which correctly strips outer sheath and cuts dielectric properly. Looking forward to your reply and many thanks
Sadly, we can't do that. We're an association for the commercial AV industry, and we maintain brand agnosticism and will not endorse a product. What I can and will say is that when Googling a rotary coax stripper (especially if you are using it a lot) is that with any tool, don't go super cheap. You don't necessarily have to go super expensive either. Sorry that that is vague, but we must retain our independence. Any tools used in the videos themselves are strictly for illustrative purposes rather than an endorsement. Hope you find on that works for you!
@@AVIXATV thanks for you prompt reply and advice. I am about up to 1000+ coax/shotgun/power cable run installs and have tried about 8 different coax strippers ranging from £4 UK to about £30 UK. None of which give an adequate braided dielectric section for decent crimping. Most offer 5-8mm braided dielectric section which in my opinion is not good enough for crimping BNC connectors with my CK crimp tool. I shall have stick to my tried and tested method of using a dolphin utility knife of cutting cable sheath and stripping the right amount of dielectric back for centre core pin connection crimp. Once again, thanks for the quick reply
Need tool part #s please. Thx
THANK YOU FOR THIS FILM
Anybody know what crimper he used?
What about compression connectors without removable center conductors?
Hi, l have the same question? :)
However, it should be even easier, just skip one step
I am looking for this exact tool to make the three cut in one time but i can not find it anywhere online , can anyone guid me plz?
GOOD VIDEO👍
Sir the stipper name model number
perfect video.. however elaborating what crimp was being used may have been helpfull..
Informative video,
I just received my RG59 siamese and some crimp connectors.
I crimped the connector like you did and soldered on my power leads. (- to - + to +) and when i connect the camera and cable to the DVR the inferred clicks on the screen stays black and then in the lower corner i have a capital P with a red x and no picture.
selamat datang di welcome ya kak
All tools model number pls
🙏
Thank you very much, from Spain!! Your're the fucking master
My g**d**n stripper keeps cutting too deep at the first blade. It taks off the outter jacker and most of the braided shield. I even have the blade set to shallowest cut. I am using a Paladin LC CST PA1255 on belden 1506 cable.
You don't say how to configure the stripper. anyone can just put the cable in the tool and twist. it's like it just magically works out of the box. It doesn't.
BABABOOEY!!!!!1
Очень наглядно и понятно , перевод не нужен
hola buenas, quería adjuntar que este vídeo me parce terrible, voy a acabar con mi vida después de ver este vídeo, ojala el creador de este vídeo al enterarse de la noticia caiga en una terrible depresión que acabe con la muerte, la persona que aparece en el video es la persona mas horrible y tenebrosa que han podido ver mis ojos, saludos desde Guatemala
saludos desde mi Perú!
Hoy me siento muy bien porque he conseguido un pokemon nuevo. Ha sido un krookodile shiny en la plaza mayor.