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[TowerTalk] Fw: [Tower Talk] A tub to receive my coax

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Subject: [TowerTalk] Fw: [Tower Talk] A tub to receive my coax
From: "Pete N4KW" <n4kwpete@centurylink.net>
Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2012 10:22:58 -0500
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Hi Larry, I have the same tower you have with the coax arms etc. I added one extra arm made from a piece of aluminum tubing about an inch in diameter and about 5 feet long. With stainless hose clamps I mounted it to a cross brace about five feet about the ground. The end of the tube has a large square U-bolt obtained from Lowes. Two nuts on each end of the U-bolt to lock into place into the mounting holes of the aluminum tube. The coax and control cable for the rotator go through the U-bolt keeping the coax away from the tower base etc. I do not use a tub or the like, I let the coax coil it self on the ground as the tower comes down, and un coil itself when it goes up. This is the second tower that I have used this method over a period of four years and have never encountered a problem doing this with either tower.

If I were to put anything to hold the coax at the bottom I would try a very large fishing net affixing it to the tower with the same stainless hose clamps to the nets handle and tower cross brace. I did not consider any type of tub because of the possibility of cables sitting in water when it rains, and holes at the bottom does not mean complete drainage.

One last tip, I purchased a roll of bright colored plastic ribbon from Lowes and it's used at construction sites to warn people of a hole or to keep away from a dangerous overhead. Any way I take and wrap it twice around my cables and then tie it off with a long tail at each end. I place these bright ribbons every ten feet on the cables, this allows me to watch the cable going up or down from the window of my shack, which is about 200 feet from the tower.

Good luck Larry with your tower project and I know you will enjoy your tower when complete.

73 Pete N4KW

----- Original Message ----- From: "Larry Loen" <lwloen@gmail.com>
To: "towertalk" <towertalk@contesting.com>
Sent: Monday, December 31, 2012 1:16 AM
Subject: [TowerTalk] [Tower Talk] A tub to receive my coax


As many of you may remember, I have this (still) extended adventure going
to put up my tower (a US Tower HDX 572MD). The tower is actually standing up, but, given I can only work on it during weekends, the "finish" work is
taking forever.

One of the next steps, though, is to design something that sits at the
"base" to receive the coax as it coils up.

The design of the tower that I have (unlike the former one at W0IBM that I generally take as my model) has its "stand off" arms all in alignment. We
discussed whether I should let the coax fall all the way "in line" or try
to affix it to each arm.

US Towers said that hams did both, but I really don't see an easy way to
prevent the coax from "snagging" on the lower arms after lowering it. So,
the "fall through" approach seems prefered.

However, with the tilt over fixture in-place (or even if it is not), I seem to require some sort of "tub" to receive the coax when I lower the tower or
partially lower it.

The most obvious choice is a circular tub, mounted on metal or perhaps 4x4
inch wooden legs (maybe even with plywood reinforcement under the tub's
bottom.

I see an ad here:

http://tsc.tractorsupply.com/tractor/Plastic-Tubs?reqUrl=http%3A%2F%2Ftsc.tractorsupply.com%2Ftractor%2FPlastic-Tubs&storeId=10551&zoneMarketInfo=2-45&storeZip=85138&storeCity=city%2C+state&catalogId=10001&langId=-1

. . .showing an open, 25 gallon tub with a 14 inch diameter suitable for
watering horses.  Is this the sort of thing I should be looking at?  Do I
need smething bigger?  I expect to have two or three coaxes (9913F type)
plus some control cable (at least six eighteen gauge and two fourteen
gauge) going up the tower with the coax. I assume I tape the control lines
to a coax and maybe the coaxes together.

I also seem to want to put in some sort of gadget at the top so that I can provide some sort of "rounded 'L' material at the very top to provide some
strain relief for the coax which otherwise would bear the weight of a 72
foot drop at one point. That seems a problem, especially in the 120 degree
Arizona sun.

I'm not totally thrilled with this, but I don't see a good alternative
design because I don't see how to avoid the snagging issue.  I'd rather
attach everything to each extended arm, but haven't figured out how to make
it really work reliably when the tower is anywhere near fully collapsed.


Larry Wo0Z
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