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RF Connectors for LoRa Hardware

RF Connectors for LoRa Hardware

RF connector incompatibility is one of the most common and frustrating problems when assembling LoRa mesh hardware. Knowing which connectors are standard on which hardware and understanding adapter losses will save hours of troubleshooting and return shipping.

The Principal Connector Families

SMA (SubMiniature version A)

SMA connectors are the workhorses of small-form RF hardware. They are threaded (10-32 thread), rated to 18 GHz in standard form, and handle up to 500 W continuous at low frequencies. Two variants cause constant confusion:

TypeCenter Pin on MaleCenter Pin on FemaleNotes
SMA (standard)Pin protrudesSocket (receptacle)Used on most professional RF equipment and high-quality antennas
RP-SMA (Reverse Polarity)Socket (receptacle)Pin protrudesFCC-mandated on consumer WiFi devices to prevent non-certified antenna attachment; extremely common on consumer LoRa hardware

Critical: Standard SMA and RP-SMA are physically intermateable - the threads engage and the connector tightens - but they do NOT make electrical contact. You will have a physically connected but RF-dead assembly. Always verify polarity before tightening.

Which LoRa Hardware Uses Which?

HardwareConnector
RAK WisBlock (RAK4631, RAK19007)RP-SMA female on enclosure; U.FL on module
Lilygo T-Beam (most versions)SMA female (standard)
Heltec WiFi LoRa 32 v2/v3U.FL / IPEX on PCB; optional SMA adapter
Meshtastic T-Echo (SoftRF)U.FL on PCB
Seeed WIO-E5 moduleU.FL on module
Dragino LPS8 gatewayN-female (standard)
RAK Wisgate Edge (commercial gateway)N-female (standard)
TTGO LoRa32 v2U.FL with bundled SMA pigtail
Adafruit Feather M0 RFM95WU.FL; use an SMA edge-launch or U.FL pigtail

Note: Connector types can vary by hardware revision. Always verify on the actual unit or current product page before ordering cables and adapters.

N-Type Connector

The N-type is a larger, weatherproof threaded connector rated to 11 GHz (standard) or 18 GHz (precision). It is the connector of choice for any serious outdoor installation - towers, rooftop gateways, commercial deployments. N-type connectors have excellent weatherproofing when properly assembled, low contact resistance, and are designed for repeated mating cycles.

  • Used on: Commercial gateways (Dragino, RAK Wisgate, Kerlink, MultiTech), tower-mount antennas, LMR-400 and larger cable installations
  • Loss: Typically 0.05–05 - 0.1 dB per connector pair at 915 MHz
  • Availability: Widely available; both solder and crimp versions for all major coax types

U.FL / IPEX / MHF1 Connector

U.FL (the Hirose trade name) or IPEX/MHF1 (equivalent generic and Amphenol variants) are ultra-miniature snap-lock coaxial connectors used on PCBs to connect the RF IC to an external antenna pigtail. They are rated to about 500 mating cycles.

  • Used on: Almost all LoRa and GPS modules mounted on PCBs - Heltec, RAK module cores, TTGO, and most other SoC-level boards
  • Important: Extremely fragile; do not repeatedly disconnect/reconnect. Lock in place and leave. If you need a permanent connection, solder a small bead of hot glue after mating to prevent accidental disconnection.
  • Pigtails: Use only U.FL-to-SMA (or RP-SMA) pigtails made with RG-178 or similar micro-coax. The connector at the board end is U.FL female (socket on pigtail). The connector at the panel end should match your application (SMA, N, etc.)
  • Loss: U.FL connector pair itself adds approximately 0.2–2 - 0.5 dB at 915 MHz, plus cable loss of the pigtail

Adapter Losses

Each adapter in the RF path adds loss and a potential failure point. Typical losses at 915 MHz:

Adapter TypeTypical Loss at 915 MHzNotes
SMA(M) to SMA(F) barrel0.1–1 - 0.2 dBUse only when necessary; prefer direct cable
SMA to N-type0.1–1 - 0.3 dBAcceptable for indoor patch panels; not preferred outdoors
RP-SMA to SMA0.1–1 - 0.2 dBCommon necessity when mixing hardware
U.FL to SMA pigtail0.2–2 - 0.5 dBU.FL connector + cable loss; unavoidable for PCB boards
PL-259/SO-239 (UHF)0.3–3 - 0.8 dBNot designed for 915 MHz; avoid entirely

Quality Matters

A cheap SMA connector or adapter purchased in a $3 bag of 20 pieces is not equivalent to a $5 Amphenol or TE Connectivity connector. Differences include:

  • Contact resistance: quality connectors use silver or gold plating; cheap ones use brass or tin that oxidizes
  • Dimensional tolerances: loose tolerances cause intermittent contact at vibration or thermal cycling
  • Dielectric quality: cheap connectors use low-grade PTFE substitutes that absorb moisture
  • Thread quality: soft aluminum threads strip after a few matings

For outdoor permanent installations, spend the money on proper connectors. For bench development, economy connectors are acceptable. Never use economy connectors in a deployed outdoor node.