I defer to the experts. I'm no camy wizard, I just wear the stuff not
design it. I am in a rather rural location with neighbors at 1/4 mile
and farther, have no nearby airports (several but 30 miles away in
various directions), and could paint my towers and antennas
international orange with fluorescent green contrast diagonal stripes if
I wanted to and no well intentioned person or group of busy bodies could
change my mind. Out here there are no permits and no inspections for
electrical or mechanical or anything else except for septic tank
installs. The only oversight for my towers is FAA but I don't go that high.
Patrick NJ5G
On 3/22/2016 8:42 AM, jimlux wrote:
On 3/22/16 6:01 AM, Patrick Greenlee wrote:
Want your antenna to more often go unnoticed? Take a hint from some of
the camouflage patterns used on warships. Visually break up the
silhouette of the elements and boom by painting them in 2-3 shades such
as light grey, black, and an intermediate grey in an irregular random
pattern.
I'm not sure that this camouflage technique actually works in an
objective test. A lot of camouflage, particularly older styles, was
designed by artists according to what they thought would work.
Warship camouflage was designed to make it hard to get an accurate
bearing and speed from a long distance away, not to hide the ship. So
there were various "dazzle" patterns used which disrupted the
characteristic outlines (particularly when you're looking through
haze, smoke, fog through a telescope, periscope, etc.). I'm not sure
that's a valid approach for an antenna (except maybe a big dish?)
Other camouflage makes the thing you're hiding look like something
else (e.g. cell towers as trees), but that's a pretty tough trick when
you're trying to hide something against the sky, which is pretty
bright, and anything you put up is going to be darker.
I think that your best bet is something that doesn't have specular
reflections or glint (which really attracts attention). A light grey
probably works pretty well as a general thing. I believe the phrase
is "shape, shine, shadow" (from interpreting reconnaissance photos):
you want to make the shape unfamiliar, not be shiny, nor have shadow
details (paint the bottom light, and the top dark, so that when
illuminated from above, it looks evenly shaded)
If your tower or antenna will be viewed against a neighboring
mountainside, then the grays/browns/greens (according to your local
vegetation.. here in SoCal, light brown would be best, except during
the 3-4 weeks a year when it's actually green, like now)
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