@mcdanlj@social.makerforums.info
I bought a pair of 25' Intellitron stainless steel whip antennas from GigaParts while they were on sale ("two is one and one is none" and the second one tipped me me into "free shipping" making its marginal cost pretty low). On removing them from the packages, however, loose roll pins fell out, and the bases fell off the antennas. Both of them.
A roll pin is an inappropriate fastener to use to connect two concentric thin-walled tubes, so this is a design failure. And the roll pins are junk.
I'm waiting for GigaParts to approve my 3-star review.
But the more I look into this, the less annoyed I am. Just being able to look inside is cool, and I haven't been able to do that on the other whips I have where the thread stud is swaged in place.
I've learned that 21mm ID, 25mm OD is a standard size of stainless tube, and matches the outside dimensions quite well. The base is about 5mm thick not counting the thread stud. I think that they probably press fit / welded a threaded plug into standard stainless tube, turned it to a taper and milled sides flat for looks, and drilled it for the roll pin.
I really wished I could buy M10x1.5 instead of 3/8-24 for the end to match my other whips, so I've ordered some 25x21mm stainless tube. I think I'll make a brass plug. And I'll probably use a custom staked rivet in place of the roll tube to attach the pieces, though I haven't decided for sure.
Anyway, if someone who doesn't mix up ham radio and machining as hobbies buys these antennas, a few turns of electrical tape around the base will probably work around the design flaw and hole the roll pin in place.
#HamRadio