Urrgh. Spent all day trying to find the parts for my 4070A from a CA warehouse... ANY CA warehouse... eventually gave up and paid the moosefucker tax; ordered it from DigiKey.
Now facing exactly the same fucking headache, only it's the keyboard on my Lenovo Flex-3... which, joy of joys, uses the same keyboard as the Yoga (incorporated into the top cover) so it costs a fucking fortune, even from Shanghai. Or Shenzhen. Or Hong Kong... you get the drift.
mnem
Got really fucking lucky this morning. After hunting for hours last night and again over my morning cuppa, I decided to try my "last-ditch hail Mary" fix that every once in a while brings a keyboard back to life: cutting a mm or two off the end of the ribbon so when I plug it in, the contacts get a bite in fresh material. It's working now, for the time being at least; so I was then able to clear that assache off my list, and concentrate on the day's main assache: mowing/bagging the back yard full of leaves so the clippings could go out for pickup tomorrow morning.
Assache and a half: Of course it starts raining about 1/4 of the way done.
I survived it; wasn't sure I would, but I fortified m'self with acetaminophen & ibuprofen and plenty of coffee to power through. Then crashed & burned for the last 4 hours.
And finally: When Amazon wants to, they
can kick ass. Ordered this at 08:00 before I started shopping keyboards. Arrived at 18:00 while we were putting the recycles out. If you see a
DYNAMEX van on the streets, give it wide berth. Motherfuckers must drive like it's the
Cannonball Run.
TEN FUCKING HOURS. I was expecting my parts today from DigiKey, being as it was sent Express yesterday; one of the benefits of paying the moosefucker tax is you get premium shipping built-in, so I NEEDED those heat-sinks ASAP!
It was horrible to have to order that coax crimping kit just to get same-day-shipping on all of it, but I took one for the team.
Total cost: US$33, including PayPal's little markup on the exchange rate.
In all honesty, I was surprised at what arrived; the jaws are sintered metal, but decently clean molding and meet well, with the cutout on one side for a proper flare strain-relief. It appears the dies are retained with hob screws, so should be able to adjust them to some extent with shims if ever needed. All in all, a lot better quality than I expected to get in a kit with the stripper and 5 ea BNC (yay!) & PL-259
*blerk* for RG-58. I figure if I can make 3 usable patches out of that 22ft BNC cable I was using for testing my 4070A, I'll have gotten my US$25 worth.
UPDATE:I've had a chance to use these, and they are definitely good value for money. They align pretty well for cheap stamped steel and sintered-metal dies, the crimp renders clean with the expected bugle-flare on the end, all well-formed as expected.
That said, not best pleased with the ends that came in the kit; while the center hole is the correct diameter, the barb is too fat to fold the braid back over and crimp both sheathing and braid folded over the sheathing.
I was able to get a good crimp by skinning the blue Pliovic sheathing off to just the right length and pulling the braid up over the barb, then crimping with only the braid between the ferrule and the barb. Also, the center pin of those connectors are too brittle for crimping; I had to solder. The cable seems to work well up to the 30MHz max of the UTG-962E; no idea how badly I've affected the capacitance and reflected signal of that BNC at higher frequencies.
Looking on the intardnet, it appears this is exactly the way these are commonly used for HDTV and security cam installs... blearrghh.
https://youtu.be/ktQVwfo-s9wI'm sure someone will be along to bust my chops for getting the
Horror Fraught Special... I'm down widdat. As long as those BNCs keep the wiggly lines in that wire, all I care aboot.
mnem
*toddles off to ded*