Many years ago I had a couple customers with 72' aluminum Acme screw towers.
They always made me nervous as I let them down. NOT because I was
worried about the screw failing, but that the tower itself would fail
when close to horizontal. Both towers were at least a little overloaded,
and who could know whether all of the structural members were still at
new strength?
One might surmise that if it stays up in big wind it can handle the
foldover procedure...but I've seen more than a few overloaded aluminum
towers that were fine in big winds until one day they were not.
-Steve K8LX
On 10/25/2017 9:05 AM, Clay Autery wrote:
You ever actually laid eyes on the ACME Screw system they use? I have.
I've disassembled and reassembled one in detail. I've watched it in
use, up close.
It is as close to bulletproof as one can get and far superior to cables
for a number of reasons (IMO). I am intimately aware with cable and rod
actuation systems being a former aviation maintenance officer. I'll
take the ACME screw system for this tilt-down only aluminum antenna,
EVERY time. No worries about cable routing and stacking when cranking
down and up, many fewer moving parts, etc, etc.
I can hand assemble the entire system, and if I do it right, I don't
even need a ladder. No crane, no helpers.... Albeit, I love having
"helpers" around. My wife helped me disassemble mine in Pennsylvania
when we picked it up.
I can store or transport it in and 8x12x6 foot box. No LTL truck
services or attendant charges. And it doesn't "rust".
On 10/24/2017 10:01 PM, Wilson Lamb wrote:
Heights is beautiful, but you gotta trust that leadscrew!
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