I bought a "Seadog 329951 Doublee Female Bulkhead Connector"
It's 1 13/16" long and with washers and the included small nuts, it's JUST long enough for a 3/4" thick deck, when using the existing male connectors on my antenna cable.
I made some deck plates but I wasn't totally awake when I made them, so screwed it up a bit.
I had the 2 old Perko cable outlets that I had removed from the boat.
One comparing them to the antenna connector I found that the threaded section was the same diameter. 5/8.
So I thought, "Why not reuse them by drilling the center hole larger so the antenna connector can fit ?"
I drilled a 5/8 hole in a 2x4 and used screws to hold the cable outlet upside down in the hole, then used a drill press to enlarge the hole from the bottom.
I had planned to make the bottom plate with a 5/8 hole so it could slip onto the antenna inside the hull. I HAD planned to make the upper plate's hole smaller so I could tap it.
Brain dead me, used the same bit for both holes, so now they both slip on the connector.:cussing:
Not sure if solder would be strong enough.
Brazing would definitely melt the connector internally.
I'm wondering about JB weld ?
If I can get the upper deck plate to solder or epoxy on, then the upper nut wouldn't be needed which give me a bit of extra length to work with.
Who knows, I my just end up heading down to the marine place and see if they have some thing I can modify that's cheap.
Worst case a stainless fender washer that's drilled for 3 screws, tapped for the connector, and polished would work, but that's a project for another time. At this point I'm using a cable outlet so I can get the boat on the water. To many other projects and I have 1.5 week deadline planned.
With a threaded plate that's also epoxied or polyurethaned onto the connector it should be nice and waterproof with no chance of water getting past the threads.
Edit: As a final touch, something like this would be great...
http://www.sea-dog.com/groups/2231-uhf-cable-cap-chain