VEBill
Military
- Apr 25, 2002
- 7,090
Yikes. I thought I had seen everything.
A certain company that shall remain nameless, is using Twin-BNC connectors (just like a normal BNC connector, except with TWO conductors in the middle: an exposed pin and a somewhat insulated socket) to connect an external power source to a load within their product.
(Amphenol P/N 31-224, intended for RG-108A/U cable)
I figure that misusing a BNC-type connector like this would be fine for low voltage DC. But they offer the same system with a 240VAC requirement (!) for example.
My view is that using this sort of connector for anything above low voltage (like 28 VDC) is so rife with safety violations that there is absolutely no way that it could ever be permitted.
Any alternate views on this issue? Am I missing something? Would it ever be permitted? (Location is in Canada in case that matters.)
Thanks.
A certain company that shall remain nameless, is using Twin-BNC connectors (just like a normal BNC connector, except with TWO conductors in the middle: an exposed pin and a somewhat insulated socket) to connect an external power source to a load within their product.
(Amphenol P/N 31-224, intended for RG-108A/U cable)
I figure that misusing a BNC-type connector like this would be fine for low voltage DC. But they offer the same system with a 240VAC requirement (!) for example.
My view is that using this sort of connector for anything above low voltage (like 28 VDC) is so rife with safety violations that there is absolutely no way that it could ever be permitted.
Any alternate views on this issue? Am I missing something? Would it ever be permitted? (Location is in Canada in case that matters.)
Thanks.