Premium Members JimBartell Posted January 9, 2018 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 9, 2018 As most of you are probably aware the BFD and Teradek units use the exact same power connector but they are wired with polarity reversed from each other. And if you use the wrong cable the BFD analog receiver (not the digital) and the Teradek units get damaged. Today I sold a BFD to someone who had a bunch of cables and wanted to know how to tell them apart BEFORE she plugged them into the units and risked damage. My first thought was to recommend getting a voltmeter but trying to get probes on the pins is difficult and risks shorting out the cable. I have a simple cable tester I use but it isn't something you can just buy. Then I had a brainstorm: You DO have a cable tester already: It is your BFD handset! Just remove the 9V battery and plug the power cable into the POWER IN jack on the base of the unit. If it turns on your cable is good for use with the BFD. If it doesn't it is either broken or reverse polarity. Unlike the receiver the handset has reverse polarity protection so you won't risk damaging the handset. It's that simple. But you MUST REMOVE THE 9V BATTERY FIRST. It won't damage the handset or the battery if you don't but it will power the handset even if the cable is bad so it can give a false positive. I hope this helps you out in the field. Spread the word! Jim Bartell 7 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Benoit C. Gauthier Posted January 11, 2018 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 11, 2018 Thanks Jim for posting that Jim. I have in fact been using my handset to test a bunch of unidentified 2 Pin Lemo cables at the rental house but haven't thought about posting about it. As a side question: Would you mind sharing with us what your cable tester looks like and/or how you made it? Cheers,Ben Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members JimBartell Posted January 11, 2018 Author Premium Members Report Share Posted January 11, 2018 Thanks Jim for posting that Jim. I have in fact been using my handset to test a bunch of unidentified 2 Pin Lemo cables at the rental house but haven't thought about posting about it. As a side question: Would you mind sharing with us what your cable tester looks like and/or how you made it? Cheers, Ben Sure. It is just 3 parts: 1. A Lemo 2-pin socket, type B, size 0 (EGG.0B.302) or equivalent 2. A 1.2K, 1/4 watt resistor 3. A dual bidirectional red/green LED Solder one end of the resistor to the socket pin 1. Solder the other end of the resistor to the anode of the green LED (which is the cathode of the red LED). Solder the cathode of the green LED (which is the anode of the red LED) to pin 2 of the socket. Plug the cable being tested into power (12 or 24 VDC) and the 2-pin Lemo plug end into the socket of the tester. The LED will light up green for BFD cables, red for Teradek cables and neither for a broken cable. Jim Bartell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Benoit C. Gauthier Posted January 11, 2018 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 11, 2018 Thanks Jim! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Michael Desiderio Posted January 25, 2018 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 25, 2018 Huh, interesting, I've just been using a female d-tap to PHG lemo end and a multimeter. Really easy to get probes into the female d-tap. Good to know! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Alan Rencher Posted February 16, 2018 Premium Members Report Share Posted February 16, 2018 We also have these for that exact reason: https://mediablackout.net/products/2-pin-lemo-polarity-tester Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Benoit C. Gauthier Posted February 16, 2018 Premium Members Report Share Posted February 16, 2018 Alan!! What a guy! We'll start calling you Dr. Rencher. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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