To: | towertalk@contesting.com |
---|---|
Subject: | Re: [TowerTalk] Wire Antenna Supports |
From: | K9MA <k9ma@sdellington.us> |
Date: | Tue, 16 Feb 2021 22:19:43 -0600 |
List-post: | <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com> |
A friend in New Zealand, now SK, had built a tilt-over mast perhaps 40
feet tall out of 3 pieces of tubing. Sort of an overgrown version of the
wooden one that used to be in the old Handbooks. I'd imagine that for
holding up wires, it wouldn't be hard to build a taller one.
No, he isn't a SK because it fell on him! 73, Scott K9MA On 2/16/2021 10:10 PM, Gary Schafer wrote: I have an old Ezway 40 foot crank up/tilt over tower that is mounted on what they call a "Wonder post". The post is about 4 or 5 inches in diameter (steel) and 9 or 10 feet long. About 5 feet goes in the ground in a hole that you dig with a post hole digger. No concrete involved. There are 4 fins at the bottom and at the top where it is in the ground about a foot below the surface. These fins are aprox 8 inches long by 6 inches high as I remember. These keep the pipe from overturning in the ground. The tower mounts to a hinge at the top of the pipe which is about 4 or 5 feet above ground. A small winch tilts it over easily. Another winch to crank up the telescoping part. Very easy to install and very strong. I have had it up in Florida thru hurricanes and now in Wisconsin the the cold. It has never moved in the ground. The manual for Ezway is on the boatanchors manual site. The tower is no longer made but could be easily duplicated. http://bama.edebris.com/download/ezway/rbs40/rbs40.pdf This manual doesn't show the ground post well but maybe a google will turn up a better diagram. 73 Gary K4FMX-----Original Message----- From: TowerTalk [mailto:towertalk-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Stan Stockton Sent: Tuesday, February 16, 2021 8:31 PM To: Michael Poteet Cc: TowerTalk@contesting.com Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Wire Antenna Supports Mike, Call the power company and pay them to install a 35-40 foot (above ground) utility pole exactly where you want it and install a two good quality pulleys at top with good Dacron rope before they put it up. You will be able to try all sorts of antennas including inverted v, verticals, etc. 73...Stan, K5GO/ZF9CW On Tue, Feb 16, 2021, 7:18 PM Michael Poteet <mcpoteet@gmail.com> wrote:This is a request for opinions. I am thinking aboutputting up a wireantenna. At my age (81) I have no interest in climbingtowers, treesor the roof. Nor I am I interested in installing any support that requires a concrete base or that weighs over 100 pounds. I've noted there are at least a couple of telescoping masts(up to 50feet) that could be used to support simple wire antennas(when guyedappropriately). One is carbon fiber, the other isaluminum. Is thereany advantage of one of these over the other for"permanent" antenna support? -- Scott K9MA k9ma@sdellington.us _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ TowerTalk mailing list TowerTalk@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk |
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