Alan,
I'm able to tilt my US Tower TX-472 tower over with my Force12 C-4XL on it, in
one of two ways
w/o a tilt fixture...
The yagi boom is 30' long. With the use of a 12' step ladder, I'm /just/ able
to reach the u-bolts
on the boom-mast clamp, loosen them, and turn & tilt the yagi as needed. See
photos at
http://www.tinyurl.com/wa7prc-tower.
The yagi boom is in five equal-length sections. With the tower tilted over,
I'm able to access
the hardware to remove/install sections of boom + element(s) as needed and
continue to
lower the tower using this method, I highly recommend finding some way of
preventing the
mast from rotating. My rotator has a brake, or I can use a section of angle
stock drilled
to accept u-bolts that temporarily connect the mast to one rail of the tower. I
used the
latter when I needed to work on the HDR300 rotator w/ my feet on the ground.
The above is what you do when you don't have a tilt-plate. Maybe it's not so
purty but,
they work for me.
vy 73,
Bryan WA7PRC
________________________________
Date: Sun, 22 Dec 2013 12:32:14 -0500 (GMT-05:00)
From: Alan Swinger
Subject: [TowerTalk] Boom-to-Mast Tilt fixture
In the recent past I saw ADs for a tilt Boom-to-Mast fixture in CQ and QST
which allowed a
beam to tilt so that elements were vertical an thus made it easy with a
tilt-over tower to get
all on the ground for work. Does anybody have the contact info for the company
that made
these since the AD is no longer in the mags.
Thanks and 73,
Alan K9MBQ
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