| I started with the KF7P arch standoff setups on two HDX589s.  These are 
the version that hold the coax off the ground.  One worked perfectly and 
the other I couldn't make work as the wire bundle insisted on catching 
on the arch on the way up.  So, I worked with Chris for the proper 
spacing and offset design for 589 dimensions for oversize wire loop 
guides and he swapped them for the arch versions gratis.  .  Both towers 
have 3 x 9913F7 or Buryflex, 1x rotator cables (Yaesu/Orion), 1x RG6 and 
1x 6x18 control cables. 
I have never been of the school of remote remote raising/lowering. It 
only takes one snag to create a really big problem, so I always observe 
and need to be present anyway to figure 8 flake the cable bundle as it 
comes down.  My cables were installed with no twist and I want them to 
stay that way. 
Grant  KZ1W
On 11/1/2013 8:22 AM, Patrick Greenlee wrote:
 Anyone out there using the KF7P standoffs or similar and 
raising/lowering your tower successfully without observation?
Anyone out there using the KF7P standoffs or similar and have had 
snagging problems while raising and lowering your tower with or 
without observation while the tower was in motion?  If so, what seemed 
to be the problem?  Was it wind induced or otherwise?
I think there are folks out there who routinely raise and lower their 
towers remotely without observation and experience no problems.  It 
would be great to know how they do it.  One of my to be installed 
towers will be 300 ft or so and not always fun. 
Patrick AF5CK
-----Original Message----- From: Steve Dyer
Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2013 9:56 PM
To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] COAX on CRANKUP-how to hang
KF7P makes very nice stand-offs and not too pricey -- especially
compared to the price of the tower, coax, control cables, etc..
www.kf7p.com. I have no pecuniary interest. Just a happy customer.
73,
Steve
W1SRD
 Stand-offs are a high prices accessory...great profit margin!  Like 
you have had crank-ups for decades. Never had an issue with rotor 
cables or coax... Subjective opinion of one....YMMV.
73,
Dave
Wa3gin
Sent from my iPad
Be Prepared Stay Prepared
 
On Oct 30, 2013, at 7:39 AM, kr2q@optimum.net wrote:
I have owned crank-up towers for close to 40 years...in multiple 
locations and using
multiple types of crankup towers (Heights, Hy-Gain, US Tower).  I 
still own 2 crank-ups. 
In all cases, I just let the coax and rotor cable "hang down" right 
along side of the tower. 
I never used standoffs or coax arms.  Not sure why they are necessary.
Nothing ever got tangled or "hung up" in the tower.  I think that 
would be really difficult to do.
I mean, why would coax (eg, RG8 type) want to or be able to "decide" 
to bend and enter into
the tower lattice?  It is already handing from the very top to the 
very bottom.  For me, it would
take an extraordinary act of nature to "convince" the coax to defy 
gravity, bend into a small 
loop, and "enter" the tower lattice.
de Doug KR2Q
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