BMA connector
In many applications, screw-on RF connections can sometimes appear stretched and even unusable: for example, panels, daughter cards or inserts with multiple RF connection points. In these cases, the spacing between the connectors must be set very small, so that the nut cannot be accommodated; or the card/combination sometimes cannot be operated due to the need to be inserted into the slot. For these reasons, people have developed push-in connectors, also known as blind-mate connectors. The common blind-mate connector in military, aerospace, satellite communications and radar fields is the Blind-mate A/BMA (Blind-mate A/BMA) connector developed in the 1980s.

In view of the practicality of BMA connectors, people subsequently developed a variety of alienation styles suitable for different installation types, including BMA coaxial plug/jack connectors, BMA through-wall connectors, BMA panel-mounted connectors, BMA PCB connectors and screw-in sealed connectors. Generally, the housing and mounting parts of BMA connectors are made of stainless steel or passivated stainless steel, and sometimes gold-plated stainless steel is used. In addition, BMA connectors generally use gold-plated beryllium copper internal contacts and PTFE dielectric materials.

The construction quality and materials used in BMA connectors allow this type of connector to withstand thousands of mating cycles, which is superior to other mechanical retention mechanisms. For measurement test applications and automatic test applications, the BMA connector can be used as a high-reliability connection interface, which not only improves the connection and disconnection speed at the hardware level, but also achieves stronger reliability and more Excellent performance. In some scenarios, BMA connectors are also used in high-speed digital signal and power supply/signal applications that require high-speed switching and blind-match connections.
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