I have similar sized antennas plus a very heavy medium prop pitch rotator.
Removing the rotator, loosening the bottom antenna and boom truss,
jacking the mast down and back up, then re-installing, lining up the
antennas and setting them to true north would be a considerable job.
John KK9A
To: Edward Sawyer <SawyerEd@Earthlink.net>, towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Mast Steps
From: Guy Molinari <guy_molinari@hotmail.com>
Date: Mon, 19 Aug 2013 17:52:38 -0700
I have a similar situation. The problem for me is that I have big stuff.
The antenna just above the top of the tower is a 6 el 20m beam that weighs
well
over 200lbs (60 foot boom). Pulling an Orion rotor out of AB-105 is no
small
task either. I had to climb the mast to fix a 15m beam that spun in the
wind.
The pucker factor is way high and if you don't manage your lanyards
right you
could wind up in deep shit real fast. Not good at 160 feet.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless Smartphone
Edward Sawyer <SawyerEd@Earthlink.net> wrote:
>Additional Information:
>
>
>
>- There are 2 antennas on each tower, one at the top of the tower
>on the mast at 1 ft above the tower and one 10 ft up the mast. So an extra
>tower section is not an option. I have to loosen the bottom antenna t allow
>the mast to slip in the u-bolts as its lowering.
>
>- My rotor is 9 ft down the top section. I attach the cum along
>about 3 ft down the mast portion which is in the tower, just under the
>thrust bearing inside the tower. I lift it up just enough to free the rotor
>of the weight. Remove the rotor. Then start lowering the mast through the
>rotor tray hole until the cum along is stopped by the rotor plate. The mast
>is down 5 ft from the starting point.
>
>Ed N1UR
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