> One nice thing about solo work, for me it is not rushed. I have no people
> waiting that need to leave at a certain time, no schedule, and if I am
> tired and wish to take a break I can. If I do not finish today, I'll do it
> tomorrow. It is enjoyable unstressful work.
> John KK9A
Exactly. I have found that the hardest thing to do on a project like this is
to co-ordinate my time with someone else's. If you are trying to assemble a
crew, you have to co-ordinate your time with the others and then co-ordinate
their schedules with each other's, sometimes virtually impossible. It probably
goes up in difficulty in proportion at least to the square of the number of
helpers; four times as much hassle with two helpers as with one, nine times the
hassle with three people, etc.
Here's an incident report of a tower fatality that occurred a few years ago
with a professional climber, apparently due to his failure to follow standard
safety protocol. He bet his life on the integrity of the structure he was
climbing, and lost the bet.
http://wirelessestimator.com/content/articles?pagename=Tower%20Climber%20Lawsuit
Don k4kyv
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