I ended up figuring out it was RP-SMA when I found a gigabyte stock antenna page that mentioned they were RP-SMA, those antennas came with the mobo and those were the ones that broke off. Discover all CAD files of the 'SMA Connectors' category from Supplier-Certified Catalogs SOLIDWORKS, Inventor, Creo, CATIA, Solid Edge, autoCAD, Revit and many more CAD software but also as STEP, STL, IGES, STL, DWG, DXF and more neutral CAD formats. I needed some antennas cuz the stock antenna wire broke, so I took out the antennas from this old router, and put them on the SMA male connector on my mobo, and my signal on 2.4 GHz turned to 99% from 40%(without any antennas).Īm I missing something here? I want to buy new antennas to support 5GHz but before I do so I want to confirm the SMA thing: Does RP-SMA male work on SMA male connectors fine? or is my mobo manual wrong and the sma connector is actually an RP-SMA female and that's why its working?ĮDIT: You can delete this thread, gigabyte were kind enough NOT to mention that their connectors are RP-SMA in the manual. The reason for my confusion is that I had an old TP-Link router TL-WR1043ND V1, which according to its manual it has RP-SMA antennas -> However, my mobo's manual says that the two connectors coming out of the back panel are regular SMA connectors, they have a pin sticking out so I am assuming it's an SMA male connector, here's my mobo's manual -> (h97n)-(wifi)_e.pdf Hi everyone, would really appreciate a clarification on this haha.īasically, I am confused because the information on the net says that RP-SMA will not work electronically with SMA connectors, even though it might fit mechanically ->
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