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The US Navy used the term BNC to mean "Baby Neill Constant". The term BNC appeared in 1948 in ads for Amphenol connectors [4] together with the MIL-spec name UG-88/U.. While Paul Neill and Carl Concelman did not invent the BNC, it is often suggested that BNC means Bayonet Neill–Concelman. [5]
A Neill–Concelman connector may refer to: BNC connector, with bayonet-type fastening; TNC connector, threaded version This page was last edited on 7 ...
BNC connector (Bayonet Neill-Concelman). (IEC 61169-8 and IEC 61169-63) C-type connector (Concelman) Dezifix connector, hermaphrodite connector used mainly by Rohde & Schwarz; DIN 7/16 connector (DIN 47223 and IEC 61169-4 [1]), a high-power 50 Ω connector originally developed by Spinner [2]
As others have written before, this name is misleading, since the BNC is neither a baby, nor a constant impedance connector. According to Google and my personal experiences, most ham operators likely also know the BNC as "Bayonet Neill-Concelman", not as "Baby Neill Constant" (I, for one, have never heard of the latter).
Amphenol engineers also invented the commonly used BNC connector ("Bayonet Neill-Concelman"). [8] Amphenol Fiber Systems International is a fiber optic company started in 1993 that specializes in the fabrication and manufacturing of fiber optic connectivity products and systems.
The truth of the matter is that the N connector was invented By Paul Neill of Bell Labs and most likely pilfered by the Nazis prior to WWII. Another connector (the C connector) is attributed to a fellow Bell Lab engineer named Concelman. A hybrid of the two designs was designated the BNC (Bayonet Neill Concelman) connector.
BNC connector (Bayonet Neill–Concelman), a type of RF coaxial cable jack; BNC (software), (abbreviation of Bounced Network Connection) an IRC program functioning as a proxy between an IRC client and a type of computer network proxy redirector; Biological, Nuclear, Chemical, types of weapons of mass destruction
Invented in the late 1950s and named after Paul Neill of Bell Labs and Carl Concelman of Amphenol, the TNC connector has been employed in a wide range of radio and wired applications. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The TNC connector features a 7/16"-28 thread, [ 4 ] not to be confused with a 7/16 DIN connector , which is the diameter of the mating surfaces as ...