Collins 180S-1 Jumper Plug Reproduction

Collins 180S-1 Jumper Plug Engineering Design | VK6ADA
Collins S-Line — Engineering Design Document

Collins 180S-1
Jumper Plug Reproduction

A comprehensive engineering design for fabricating reproduction jumper plugs for the Collins 180S-1 antenna tuner — including circuit analysis, RF electrical requirements, dimensional specification, parts list, vendor sources, assembly instructions, and critical corrections to common assumptions about these components.

✎ Mike Peace VK6ADA ◆ r-390a.net Administrator ◆ Engineering Design Rev 1.0
Collins S-Line — Engineering Design Document Rev 2.0

Collins 180S-1
Jumper Plug Reproduction

A comprehensive engineering design for fabricating reproduction jumper plugs for the Collins 180S-1 antenna tuner — expanded from Rev 1.0 to address all identified omissions: reactive voltage physics, connector identification, matching range analysis, socket wiring traces, fabrication decision flowchart, and period-correct appearance guidance.

✎ Mike Peace VK6ADA ◆ r-390a.net Administrator ◆ Engineering Design Rev 2.0 — Omissions Addressed

▲ What Was Added in This Revision

NEWSec. 2A
Known vs Assumed Status Table — Every factual claim in this document rated by evidential confidence: Confirmed, Probable, Unconfirmed, or Unknown. Read this before taking any action.
NEWSec. 2B
Fabrication Decision Flowchart — Visual guide from “I have a 180S-1 without plugs” to “I have working reproductions” covering all conditional paths.
EXPANDEDSec. 3
Reactive Voltage Multiplication Physics — WHY the C2 node sees voltages far above the transmission line voltage, with Q-factor analysis and worked calculation.
EXPANDEDSec. 4
Socket Face Identification Diagrams — SVG drawings of what each candidate connector type looks like face-on; use with a torch and magnifier to confirm type from any rear panel photo.
EXPANDEDSec. 5
Online Photo Research Path + Wiring Trace Procedure — How to confirm connector type from community photos and how to trace internal socket wiring if labels are absent.
NEWSec. 6A
Antenna Matching Range Analysis — Which real antenna types and impedances benefit from L-network mode, SHUNT C2, and SERIES C2. Helps decide whether reproduction plugs are even needed for your antenna system.
NEWSec. 6B
Both Plugs Simultaneously + Damaged Socket Guidance — What happens with both plugs installed; what to do when the socket itself is damaged or missing.
EXPANDEDSec. 10
Period-Correct Appearance for CCA-Grade Restoration — What original plugs likely looked like and how to achieve a period-correct appearance on reproductions.

1Corrections to the Premise

Several errors and critical omissions in the standard understanding of the 180S-1 jumper plugs affect both the design approach and the safety of the reproduction. These must be understood before any fabrication work begins.

⚠ Errors & Omissions — Read First

ERROR1 of 3
“Two identical interchangeable plugs.” — The plugs are functionally dedicated. One configures C2 in series (SERIES socket); the other in shunt (SHUNT socket). They may be electrically identical shorting plugs but each belongs in a specific labeled socket. Installing the wrong plug derates performance for certain antenna loads; it does not damage the unit.
ERROR2 of 3
“Without plugs the unit has only one mode.” — Without either plug, C2 is completely isolated and the 180S-1 operates as a pure L-network (C1 + L1). Collins states this is the most common operating mode. A 180S-1 without its jumper plugs is fully functional for the majority of HF antenna matching tasks.
ERROR3 of 3
“Connector type can be assumed.” — The connector cannot be confirmed from publicly available sources; the BAMA manual is image-only. RCA phono is the most likely candidate based on Collins S-Line practice, but must be physically verified before fabrication.
OMISSION1 of 5
RF power is not trivial. At 1 kW the plugs are in the live RF path and must handle hundreds of volts RF peak and several amperes. Contact resistance and conductor gauge directly affect reliability.
OMISSION2 of 5
Internal wiring must be confirmed. Even if connector type is identified, which terminals are shorted must be verified from the schematic or an original plug. This document assumes tip-to-barrel shorting — the most likely configuration — but this must be verified.
OMISSION3 of 5
Buy the manual first. Surplus Sales of Nebraska (part #COL-180S-1, ~$19) sells the full reproduction manual with photographs and schematic. This is the authoritative source for connector type, socket labeling, and wiring — all information unavailable from free online sources.
OMISSION4 of 5
Reactive voltage multiplication not explained. The C2 node sees voltages far above the transmission line voltage due to Q-factor multiplication in the reactive network. This is why cheap audio connectors fail at RF power. See Section 5 for the physics.
OMISSION5 of 5
No antenna matching range guidance. For many operators the L-network mode (no plugs) is entirely sufficient. Before fabricating reproductions, verify that your antenna system actually requires C2 in circuit. See Section 8.

2Known vs Assumed Status

Every significant claim in this document is assigned one of four confidence levels. Read this table before making any purchasing or fabrication decisions.

ClaimStatusSource / Basis
Cabinet color is St. James GrayCONFIRMEDCCA sale listing W1RC; CCA Grey Boxes archive
180S-1 is an S-Line Grey BoxCONFIRMEDCCA historical archives; S-Line Accessories listing
C2 = vacuum variable capacitorCONFIRMEDCCA and universal-radio.com product descriptions
L-network is most common mode (no plugs)CONFIRMEDCollins factory description: “in most cases it is used as an L network”
Two jumper plugs, one per socketCONFIRMEDMultiple community sale listings
Plugs are dedicated (SERIES / SHUNT)PROBABLELogical from circuit description; socket labels typical of Collins design practice
Connector type is RCA phonoUNCONFIRMEDEngineering inference from Collins S-Line practice — not verified against manual or unit
Plugs short tip-to-barrel internallyUNCONFIRMEDAssumed from standard shorting plug design — requires confirmation from schematic
Socket labels read “SERIES” and “SHUNT”UNCONFIRMEDAssumed; exact label text requires manual or unit examination
Plug body color / appearanceUNKNOWNNo known photographs of original plugs in community literature
Whether both plugs can be installed simultaneouslyUNKNOWNDepends on socket wiring; not confirmed from any source

3Fabrication Decision Flowchart

Use this flowchart before purchasing any parts. Many 180S-1 users do not need reproduction plugs at all.

Start: 180S-1 plugs missing Does your antenna system match successfully without plugs? (SWR ≤ 2:1 using C1 + L1 only) YES No plugs needed NO Do you have the original 180S-1 instruction manual? YES Verify socket type & wiring → Section 7 Build plugs → Section 12 NO Can you access an original unit or clear rear-panel photo? YES Identify socket type visually → Section 6 NO Purchase manual first Surplus Sales NE #COL-180S-1 (~$19) OR post to CCA Reflector → Section 7 Verified → Build Plugs Parts list Section 10 · Assembly Section 12 Test Section 14 · ~$15 total parts cost
Fig 1. Fabrication decision flowchart. The most important decision is at the top — for many antenna systems, no plugs are needed at all.

4Circuit Analysis

The 180S-1 contains three major passive RF elements: C1 (input shunt capacitor), L1 (roller inductor), and C2 (variable vacuum capacitor). The jumper plugs switch C2 between two circuit configurations by closing pre-wired internal paths in the rear panel sockets.

Three Operating Modes

MODE A — L-NETWORK MODE B — SHUNT C2 MODE C — SERIES C2 (No plugs — most common) (SHUNT plug installed) (SERIES plug installed) C1 L1 TX ANT C2 Matches 10–200 Ω range depending on L1/C1 C1 L1 TX ANT C2 SHUNT PLUG Low-impedance antennas; very short verticals C1 L1 C2 TX ANT SERIES PLUG High-impedance / long-wire / aircraft trailing wire
Fig 2. Three circuit modes. Mode A (no plugs) is the most common. Dashed line in Mode A = C2 isolated. Both plugs use the same chassis ground rail.

How the Jumper Plug Works — The Socket Circuit

The jumper plug is purely passive — it shorts two contacts. The routing intelligence is entirely in the chassis wiring at the rear panel sockets. Each socket has two internal terminals; the plug’s tip and barrel short them together when inserted, closing the pre-wired C2 path. Without the plug, the contacts are open and C2 remains isolated.

What Happens With Both Plugs Installed Simultaneously If the SERIES and SHUNT sockets are wired independently (each to a different terminal of C2 or different circuit nodes), installing both plugs could create an unintended short circuit within the RF path — potentially shorting the antenna terminal to ground. If both sockets share the same internal node, installing both might simply add capacitance in an unhelpful topology. Do not install both plugs simultaneously without first tracing the internal wiring from the schematic. This is listed as Unknown in the status table because it depends entirely on the chassis wiring that has not been confirmed from publicly available sources.

5RF Electrical Requirements

The jumper plug contacts are in the RF signal path at 1 kW. The following analysis establishes minimum ratings, including the reactive voltage multiplication physics that make connector choice safety-critical.

Why the C2 Node Voltage Can Greatly Exceed Line Voltage

In a reactive L-C network operating at high Q, voltages across individual components can be many times the applied line voltage. This is not unique to the 180S-1 — it is a fundamental property of resonant and near-resonant circuits.

Reactive Voltage Multiplication — Q-Factor Analysis

Network Q (high-efficiency tuner)Q ≈ 5 to 20 typical for HF ATU
Line voltage at 1 kW, 50 Ω matchedV_line_pk = √(2 × P × Z₀) = √(100,000) ≈ 316 V_pk
Voltage across reactive element (Q=10)V_C2_pk = Q × V_line = 10 × 316 ≈ 3,160 V_pk
At reactive antenna load (VSWR=5:1)Additional 2.24× factor → up to ~7,000 V_pk possible
Design margin applied (÷5 for C2 terminal)Jumper plug sees fraction of full capacitor voltage
Conservative design voltage rating≥ 1,500 V_pk (maintains 2× margin at moderate Q)
Circulating current in reactive networkI_circ = Q × I_line ≈ 10 × 4.5 A = 45 A_rms at Q=10
Current through jumper plugFraction of I_circ; conservatively ≥ 10 A_rms design point

The vacuum capacitor C2 is specified precisely because of these elevated voltages. A vacuum dielectric sustains kilovolt-level RF without arc-over; an audio RCA plug with a polyethylene dielectric does not. The jumper plug sits at the antenna terminal of C2 — a high-voltage point in the reactive network whenever C2 is in circuit.

Requirements Summary

ParameterMinimum RequirementBasis
Voltage withstand (RF peak)≥ 1,500 V_pkConservative margin on Q-factor voltage multiplication
Current carrying capacity≥ 10 A_rms2× headroom on transmission line current
Contact resistance< 5 mΩThermal limit: P_heat = I² × R < 0.5 W at 10 A
Connector body insulation≥ 2,500 V DC testStandard for 1 kW HF service with margin
Conductor cross-section≥ 1.5 mm² (16 AWG)Current capacity with thermal headroom
Conductor materialNickel, silver, or gold over copperTarnish resistance — oxidised contact = failure at power
Dielectric materialPTFE (Teflon) minimumVoltage withstand + low HF loss tangent
Consumer Audio RCA Plugs Will Fail at Power Gold-plated consumer audio RCA plugs have polyethylene or acetal dielectrics rated for millivolt audio signals. At 1 kW HF RF with reactive loading, the dielectric will arc through, the thin-plated contacts will heat and oxidise, and the plug will fail — potentially damaging the vacuum capacitor or the transmitter output stage. Use only Switchcraft 3502, Amphenol ACPR-SL, or equivalent RF-grade professional connectors with Teflon insulators.

6Connector Type & Identification

The connector type on the 180S-1 rear panel is unconfirmed (see status table, Section 2). The following section gives both the engineering assessment and a visual identification guide for use when examining an actual unit or a clear photograph.

Engineering Assessment — Most Likely Type

Connector TypeLikelihoodReasoning
RCA Phono (IEC 60169-11)Most likelyStandard Collins S-Line inter-unit RF connector on 51S-1, KWM-2, 75S-3B rear panels; correct era; single-conductor shorting function maps cleanly to tip-to-barrel short
Banana / binding postPossibleUsed on some Collins accessories; would require a U-wire jumper rather than a shorting plug body
BNCPossible but unlikelyBNC was less common in Collins S-Line era accessories; bayonet locking is unusual for configuration jumpers
PL-259 / SO-239 (UHF)UnlikelyToo large for a configuration jumper; reserved for main antenna/transmission line connections
Proprietary multi-pinVery unlikelyCollins used standard connectors for simple configuration switching; no evidence of proprietary jumper connector in community literature

Socket Face Identification Guide

Use a torch and magnifier (or a clear rear-panel photograph) to compare the socket geometry to the diagrams below. Measure the outer diameter of the socket opening if possible.

SOCKET FACE IDENTIFICATION — VIEWED FROM REAR OF CHASSIS RCA PHONO (Most Likely) OD: ~9.5mm barrel Centre pin socket visible Spring ring at ~28mm OD BANANA / BINDING POST 4mm hole visible Often on rectangular body Two posts for U-wire jumper BNC (Possible) OD: ~14mm bayonet shell Two bayonet slots visible Centre pin at 4mm OD SO-239 UHF (Unlikely) OD: ~24mm threaded shell 4 mounting holes visible Too large for config jumper
Fig 3. Socket face identification guide. View the rear panel of the 180S-1 with a good light source and compare to these diagrams. Key discriminator: RCA has a visible spring ring and small (~3mm) centre pin socket; BNC has visible bayonet slots; SO-239 has four mounting holes and a 24mm threaded shell.

7Verification Procedure

Complete all steps possible before purchasing parts. Steps 1–3 can be done remotely; steps 4–5 require physical access.

Remote Verification — No Unit Required

  1. 1
    Search online photo sources. Search eBay for “Collins 180S-1” and examine rear-panel photographs of listed units. Search the CCA website image archive and the Antique Radio Forums photo threads. Look specifically for the two jumper sockets — compare to the face diagrams in Section 6. A single clear rear-panel photo can confirm the connector type with certainty.
  2. 2
    Post to the CCA Reflector ([email protected]). Ask specifically: “Can anyone photograph the rear panel of a Collins 180S-1 showing the two jumper plug sockets close-up?” Owners of complete units can typically respond within days. Request both face-on and angled views. Ask for a ruler or coin in frame for scale.
  3. 3
    Purchase the instruction manual reproduction. Surplus Sales of Nebraska, part #COL-180S-1, ~$19. The manual contains rear-panel photographs and the full schematic showing socket labels and wiring. This is the only source that can confirm both connector type AND internal wiring simultaneously.

Physical Verification — With Unit in Hand

  1. 4
    Inspect the sockets with a torch and loupe. Compare to the face diagrams in Section 6. Measure the socket opening with digital calipers: RCA ≈ 9.5mm OD; BNC ≈ 14mm; SO-239 ≈ 24mm. Read the socket labels — note the exact label text for both sockets.
  2. 5
    Trace the internal wiring from each socket. With the chassis accessible: follow the wire from each socket terminal to its connection inside the chassis. Socket pin 1 (centre contact) and pin 2 (barrel/ground contact) each connect to specific nodes. Sketch the connections: draw a simple diagram showing Socket A pin 1 → [node name], Socket A pin 2 → [node name]. Do the same for Socket B. This tells you what the plug shorting those two contacts will actually do to the RF circuit.
Once Connector Type Is Confirmed — What to Do Next RCA phono → proceed directly to Section 9 (Dimensions) and Section 10 (Parts List). Banana/binding post → see Section 17 (Alternatives) for U-wire design. BNC → same design as RCA but with Amphenol UG-89 or equivalent BNC shorting cap; adjust dimensions accordingly. Any other type → post findings to CCA Reflector before proceeding.

8Antenna Matching Range — Do You Need the Plugs?

Before fabricating reproduction plugs, determine whether your antenna system actually requires C2 in circuit. For many amateur HF antennas, the L-network mode (no plugs) provides fully adequate matching across all bands.

Mode A — L-Network (No Plugs): Typical Matching Range

With C1 and L1 available, a well-designed L-network can match impedances from approximately 10 Ω to 500 Ω into 50 Ω, depending on how L1 and C1 are adjusted. The practical range depends on frequency — lower bands have a wider matching range due to the larger available inductance at lower L1 settings. This covers:

  • Resonant dipoles, verticals, and Yagis fed with 50-ohm coax (VSWR ≤ 3:1)
  • Most trapped antennas and multiband verticals operated near resonance
  • Off-resonance dipoles within approximately 2:1 impedance ratio of resonance
  • The original aircraft trailing wire application at most frequencies

Mode B — SHUNT C2: When This Mode Helps

Adding C2 in shunt extends the network’s ability to match lower-impedance loads — antennas presenting less than approximately 20–30 Ω at the tuner input. This includes:

  • Very short verticals (electrically short monopoles) presenting low resistive impedance with large capacitive reactance
  • Antennas with unusual feed-point impedances below the L-network’s practical range
  • Some NVIS configurations on the lower HF bands where antenna impedance drops below 20 Ω
  • Aircraft trailing wires on certain frequency/length combinations

Mode C — SERIES C2: When This Mode Helps

Adding C2 in series extends matching to higher-impedance loads requiring series capacitive loading. This includes:

  • Long-wire antennas (the primary original design use case — aircraft trailing wires typically present very high impedance)
  • End-fed half-wave antennas presenting several hundred ohms at the feed point
  • Antennas with large inductive reactance components requiring series capacitive cancellation
  • Random-length wire antennas far from resonance on certain bands
Practical Test — Do You Need the Plugs? Connect your antenna system to the 180S-1 with no plugs installed. Adjust L1 and C1 for minimum reflected power as shown on the 302C-3 directional wattmeter or an external SWR bridge. If you achieve SWR ≤ 1.5:1 on your operating frequencies, the L-network mode is sufficient and reproduction plugs provide no operational benefit — they add value only cosmetically for CCA grading purposes.

9Dimensional Specification

Dimensions are for the RCA phono (IEC 60169-11) shorting plug, assuming connector type is confirmed as RCA. All dimensions must be verified against actual 180S-1 sockets before purchasing parts.

RCA PHONO SHORTING PLUG — CROSS-SECTION (approx 2:1 scale) Shorting wire: tip ↔ barrel 16 AWG tinned Cu inside body Overall length: 28–32 mm (1.10–1.26″) OD: 9.5 mm (0.374″) Pin ⌀: 3.2 mm Pin protrusion ~7 mm FRONT FACE INTERNAL WIRING Centre pin (tip) ──── shorted ──── Outer barrel (ground) Wire: 16 AWG tinned Cu Kester 44 silver-bearing solder
Fig 4. Dimensional drawing. Shorting connection (red dashed) runs inside the body from tip to barrel. All dimensions are for standard Switchcraft 3502. Verify against actual sockets before ordering.
DimensionNominalToleranceNotes
Outer barrel OD9.5 mm (0.374″)±0.2 mmMust engage socket retention spring
Centre pin diameter3.175 mm (0.125″)±0.05 mmIEC 60169-11 standard
Centre pin protrusion7.0 mm (0.275″)±0.5 mmMust reach socket centre contact
Overall plug length28–32 mm (1.10–1.26″)±2 mmVaries by manufacturer
Shorting wire gauge16 AWG minimum (1.5 mm²)Current capacity requirement

10Parts List

Parts for two complete plugs (one SERIES, one SHUNT). Assumes RCA phono connector — verify type first.

ItemDescriptionQtySpecificationPart Numbers
P1, P2Male RCA phono plug, RF-grade, no cable strain relief2 (+ 1 spare)Nickel or silver-plated brass body; Teflon insulator; professional gradeSwitchcraft 3502; Amphenol ACPR-SL
W1, W2Shorting wire, 16 AWG tinned copper5 cmTinned or silver-plated copper; no insulation needed inside plug bodyBelden 9493 or similar
T1, T2Heat shrink tubing, clear, 12 mm ID, 3:1 ratio4 cmRated ≥ 125°C; Raychem DR-25 preferredTE Connectivity RNF-3000; Raychem DR-25
S1Silver-bearing solder, 63/37 or 60/405 gResin-core; silver content reduces contact resistanceKester 44; MG Chemicals 4900
L1, L2Adhesive label, white, permanent, 10×25mm2Rated ≥ 85°C; permanent adhesiveBrady M21-375-499 or equivalent

11Vendor Sources

Connectors — Primary

Mouser Electronics

Switchcraft 3502 and Amphenol ACPR series in stock. Search by part number. No minimum. ~$3–4 each. Ships worldwide.

mouser.com ↗
Connectors — Primary

DigiKey Electronics

Full Switchcraft and Amphenol connector lines. Same-day dispatch. Search Switchcraft 3502 or Amphenol ACPR-SL.

digikey.com ↗
Manual — Critical First Step

Surplus Sales of Nebraska

180S-1 instruction manual reproduction, part #COL-180S-1, ~$19. Contains rear-panel photographs and schematic confirming connector type and socket wiring. (402) 346-4750.

surplussales.com ↗
Manual — Alternative

Nationwide Radio / KE9PQ

Alternative source for 180S-1 manual reproduction with spiral binding and fold-out schematic pages.

ke9pq.com ↗
Community Verification

CCA Reflector — [email protected]

Post before ordering parts. Members with complete 180S-1 units can confirm connector type, photograph sockets, and may offer original plugs for copying.

collinsradio.org ↗
RF Parts

RF Parts Company

If the vacuum capacitor C2 requires replacement due to arc damage. Verify capacitance range and voltage rating against the 180S-1 instruction manual before ordering.

rfparts.com ↗

12Assembly Instructions

Verify Connector Type Before Assembly These instructions assume RCA phono. If the actual connector differs, adapt accordingly. Do not skip Section 7.

Tools Required

  • Temperature-controlled soldering station at 350°C
  • Needle-nose pliers; wire strippers for 16 AWG; flush-cut cutters
  • Heat gun; helping hands or PCB vice
  • Ohmmeter (continuity check at every stage)
  • Resin flux pen; magnifier or loupe

Step-by-Step Assembly

  1. 1
    Disassemble the plug body. Unscrew the barrel from the tip assembly. Inspect both contacts — clean with 99% IPA if tarnished. The centre pin solder cup and the barrel ground contact ring must both be bright metal.
  2. 2
    Prepare the shorting wire. Cut 20 mm of 16 AWG tinned copper. Strip 4 mm from each end. Tin both ends with silver-bearing solder — a bright, fully wetted fill on each tip.
  3. 3
    Solder wire to centre pin. Apply flux to the centre pin solder cup. Heat cup and wire simultaneously. Flow solder to fill. Joint must be shiny — no cold joints. Allow 30 seconds cool before handling.
  4. 4
    Check resistance immediately. Measure pin-to-barrel with ohmmeter. If reading shows OL (open circuit) now, before the barrel is assembled, a joint has failed — find and re-solder before continuing.
  5. 5
    Route wire and solder to barrel ground contact. Route so no kinking or strain when assembled. Apply flux. Heat contact and wire simultaneously. Flow silver-bearing solder to fill. Bright, fully wetted joint required.
  6. 6
    Inspect both joints under magnification. Look for cold joints (dull/granular), insufficient fill, or solder bridges to adjacent contacts. Reheat and re-flow any suspect joint.
  7. 7
    Verify continuity: tip-to-barrel <0.05 Ω. With both joints made and before closing: measure tip-to-barrel. Must read <0.05 Ω. Readings of 0.000–0.010 Ω are ideal. Anything above 0.5 Ω means a deficient joint.
  8. 8
    Slide heat shrink over rear before closing. A 20 mm length of 12 mm heat shrink over the barrel provides strain relief and seals against dust ingress.
  9. 9
    Assemble plug body. Thread barrel onto tip assembly and tighten firmly. The barrel-to-body joint is also part of the ground circuit. Apply heat gun to shrink the tubing.
  10. 10
    Final resistance check. Measure through the fully assembled connector: tip-to-barrel must still read <0.05 Ω. Test mechanical security — barrel must not rotate under hand force. Repeat for the second plug.
ASSEMBLY EXPLODED VIEW Outer Barrel Nickel brass / 9.5mm OD Teflon insulator + centre pin Shorting wire 16 AWG tinned Cu tip ←→ barrel Heat shrink 12mm × 20mm 3:1 ASSEMBLED R < 0.05 Ω tip-barrel
Fig 5. Assembly sequence. Heat shrink (green) slides over barrel before closing. Verify resistance at each stage.

13Labeling & Period-Correct Appearance

Functional Labeling

PlugLabelSocketSuggested Colour
Plug 1SERIESSERIES socket on rear panelBlue label
Plug 2SHUNTSHUNT socket on rear panelOrange label

Apply a small adhesive label to the heat shrink at the rear of each plug. Cover with clear adhesive tape for durability. Store both plugs in a labelled bag secured to the rear of the unit to prevent loss.

Period-Correct Appearance for CCA-Grade Restoration

The original plug appearance is classified Unknown in the status table — no known photographs of original 180S-1 jumper plugs exist in publicly available community literature. For a CCA-grade restoration, the best approach is:

  • First priority: locate an original. Post to the CCA Reflector requesting photographs. If an owner has the original plugs, photograph them for dimensions and appearance before deciding on reproductions.
  • For RCA phono reproductions: Collins used nickel-plated hardware throughout the S-Line. Switchcraft 3502 in nickel finish is appropriate. Avoid chrome-plated or gold-plated plugs — neither is consistent with Collins S-Line period practice.
  • Body length: Keep the plug body compact — a short-body plug is more consistent with the utilitarian Collins accessory aesthetic than a long-body audiophile plug with an extended grip.
  • No external identification markings on original plugs — original Collins configuration plugs typically had no printed labels. The socket itself was labeled on the chassis. Reproductions should therefore carry only a small identification tag on the heat shrink rather than marking the plug body itself.
  • CCA disclosure: Reproduction plugs must be disclosed as reproductions in any CCA listing. They do not reduce the grade below Very Good if the rest of the unit is grade-appropriate, but must be identified explicitly.

14Functional Testing

Bench Tests Before Installation

  1. 1
    DC continuity: Tip-to-barrel resistance <0.05 Ω on both plugs. Readings of 0.000–0.010 Ω are ideal. Any reading above 0.5 Ω = failed joint, find and re-solder.
  2. 2
    High-current bench test (recommended): Pass 5 A DC through the assembled plug for 60 seconds. Monitor for localised heating at solder joints. Any area measurably hotter than ambient after 60 seconds at 5 A indicates a joint that will fail at RF power.
  3. 3
    Physical retention: Insert plug into a spare RCA socket or the actual 180S-1 socket (unit unpowered). Plug must seat positively and resist pull with moderate force. Rattle or looseness indicates a socket retention spring problem — not a plug problem.

In-Service Verification (Low Power First)

  1. 4
    Verify at 5–10 W CW before any high-power operation. Note L1 and C1 settings at best match with no plug installed (baseline).
  2. 5
    Install SHUNT plug. Retune C2 and L1. If match improves or extends to a previously unmatchable load, the plug is working correctly.
  3. 6
    Remove SHUNT, install SERIES. Repeat. Each mode should change the tuning parameters noticeably — if both give identical SWR to the no-plug L-network, the sockets may not be wired as expected.
  4. 7
    Increase power in stages (25%, 50%, 75%, 100%). Monitor plugs for heat, arcing noise, or unusual smell. Any of these = reduce power immediately and investigate.

15Operating Without the Plugs

Without Either Plug: L-Network Mode — Fully Functional Without either plug, C2 is completely isolated. The 180S-1 operates as a pure L-network: C1 (input shunt) + L1 (series inductor). This is the most common operating mode per Collins’ own description. A 180S-1 without jumper plugs handles the majority of HF antenna matching and is fully functional as designed for standard use. The plugs extend matching range only for edge-case antennas with extreme impedances.

See Section 8 for the matching range analysis of each mode and the practical test for determining whether plugs are needed for your specific antenna system.

16Edge Cases & Damaged Sockets

Both Plugs Installed Simultaneously

This scenario is addressed in Section 4. Do not install both plugs until the socket wiring has been traced from the schematic. Without confirmed wiring knowledge, installing both plugs simultaneously could create an unintended short circuit between circuit nodes.

Damaged or Missing Sockets

If the rear panel sockets are damaged, corroded beyond recovery, or entirely absent (removed by a previous owner), the circuit path that the jumper plug would activate may still be present in the chassis wiring — just with a missing entry point. Options:

  • Replace the socket. If connector type is confirmed as RCA, replacement Switchcraft 12B RCA panel-mount jacks are available from Mouser and DigiKey. The socket mounts through a standard hole in the rear panel. Replace like-for-like.
  • Direct chassis wiring bridge. If socket replacement is not practical, trace the two terminals of each missing socket to their chassis wiring connections. Install a direct short between those two connection points in the chassis wiring to permanently activate the desired C2 mode. This is appropriate only for an operator who knows which mode their antenna requires and does not need to switch.
  • External switching. For a flexible modern solution, wire a miniature DPDT RF-rated switch to the socket connections and mount it on the rear panel with a small label. This allows mode switching without the original plug mechanism. Verify switch RF current and voltage ratings against the requirements in Section 5 before installation.

Corroded Sockets

Socket contacts that are tarnished but mechanically intact can be treated with DeOxit D5 followed by DeOxit Gold G5, cycling the plug in and out several times. If carbon deposits are present (from a previous arc-over), clean with 99% IPA on a cotton swab. Carbon tracks provide a permanent low-resistance path for subsequent arcing at reduced power levels — a socket with carbon deposits should be replaced before returning to 1 kW service.

17Alternative Approaches

If Connector Type Is Banana / Binding Post

The jumper becomes a U-wire: 12 AWG bare or tinned copper wire bent into a U, with 4mm banana plugs soldered or crimped to each end. Pomona 1400 or Mueller BU-00 banana plugs are RF-rated and appropriate for this application. The U-wire connects the two binding posts of the respective socket pair.

If Connector Type Is BNC

Use an Amphenol UG-915 or equivalent BNC shorting cap (a male BNC connector with an internal short between centre conductor and body). These are standard items from test equipment suppliers. Verify voltage and current ratings against the Section 5 requirements before use at 1 kW.

Commercial Off-the-Shelf Shorting Caps

Professional RCA shorting caps (nickel or silver-plated brass body, Teflon dielectric) are available from Hosa, Mogami, and RF component suppliers. Verify frequency and current ratings — consumer versions are audio-grade only. For HF RF use at 1 kW: nickel or silver-plated brass body and Teflon insulator are the minimum requirements. Gold-plated consumer audio caps are not suitable regardless of their attractive appearance.

3D-Printed Plug Body

A 3D-printed PETG or high-temperature PLA body around the internal contact assembly produces a cosmetically authentic reproduction. The dielectric properties of PETG at HF frequencies are marginal for high-power RF use — verify loss tangent before using at 1 kW. The current and voltage are carried entirely by the internal metal assembly; the printed body provides only physical form and does not carry RF. This approach is most valuable for collectors seeking period-correct appearance rather than engineering performance.


Recommended Path — Fastest to Working Reproductions 1. Run the Section 8 antenna test — confirm plugs are actually needed for your antenna system. 2. Purchase the manual (Surplus Sales #COL-180S-1, ~$19). 3. Post to CCA Reflector with a photo request. 4. Once connector type confirmed: Switchcraft 3502 from Mouser (~$4 each). 5. Follow Section 12 assembly (30 min with basic soldering tools). 6. Test at 5 W before full power. Total cost ≈ USD $10–15 for both plugs. Risk of a destroyed 180S-1 from an arcing consumer plug: not worth the saving.