When I was running a Skipshooter I noticed the same thing. I went to the local hardware store and got a stainless steel screw around the same size and used it. No more rust and worked just as good.Is there a solution to the rusting problem with the adjusting nail on a Skipshooter antenna?
JD
I've had a 5 and a 6 footer and the nail has rusted solid on both! Set screw is fine but the nail..............not so much!Wow. Mine is 30 years old and I've never seen rust on it. They must have changed materials since mine was made.
Stainless was my first thought as well. Next thought was how it would affect the tuning but looks like you covered that too. Good info to know. I've got a 6 footer still in the pvc pipe that it was shipped in so when it comes out it'll get the stainless nail mod!When I was running a Skipshooter I noticed the same thing. I went to the local hardware store and got a stainless steel screw around the same size and used it. No more rust and worked just as good.
The Volvo has a better cubby for a radio and better position for the antennas as well or at least they used to.Yup gotta get stuff together, new antenna, mount, etc. They threw me out of the Freightshaker and stuffed me and my crap into this................
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JD
Yup! One saving grace, I hope, is Volvos tend to ground better than Freightshakers. Gonna try mounting the antenna off a bird perch on the back of the sleeper. Tried a Z-perch off the mirror bolts and didn't like the situation. Too weeble wobbly for my taste. Maybe with longer bolts it would have been okay. Not taking a chance on having to explain why the mirror is falling off a brandy new truck! The quest begins anew!The Volvo has a better cubby for a radio and better position for the antennas as well or at least they used to.
It's always a new radio adventure when you're assigned a new truck, especially a different kind of truck. Seems like just when you got everything ironed out then they decide to give you a different one.
I had not tried a gold Titanium plated drill bit section, but the thought came to mind.
Would No-OX work on this problem seeing as the tip of the antenna is always out in the elements?If you even dabble in radio, a tiny tube of no-ox should be very high on your list of must haves.
I don't know why it wouldn't last for several years at minimum. I've use it on every antenna connection and set screw I've touched for at least a decade. If it is in a cavity or between threads or a similar place, it won't wash out. If you smeared it on the outside of the antenna it would probably be gone in a few months.Would No-OX work on this problem seeing as the tip of the antenna is always out in the elements?
JD