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[Towertalk] Pouring base of tower

To: <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: [Towertalk] Pouring base of tower
From: k4oj@tampabay.rr.com (Jim White, K4OJ)
Date: Mon, 02 Dec 2002 08:37:58 -0500
WHOA - in essence it might be possible for that to work, yes - but:

First consult a PE who is familiar with the limitataions and ratings of 
each component, etc.

I have used a piece of t-rod for a pier pin, installed in this manor - 
it was very convenient in supportuing that first section... it did not 
make the section climbable but it did make it easier to install the 
temporary rope guys.

The epoxies are available in larger quantities from bolt houses and 
contstruction suppliers specializing in concrete construction.  Look for 
guys that sell curing checmicals and bonding agents.

73,

Jim, K4OJ


Jerry Keller wrote:

>So if I understand this post correctly, I can drill holes in my old tower
>base, epoxy in some threaded rods, and use it as a base for my new tower....
>right? If so, does anyone have a name and source for the epoxy material?
>Jerry K3BZ
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: towertalk-admin@contesting.com
>[mailto:towertalk-admin@contesting.com]On Behalf Of Jim White, K4OJ
>Sent: Monday, December 02, 2002 12:34 AM
>To: Guy Olinger, K2AV
>Cc: K7LXC@aol.com; TowerTalk
>Subject: Re: [Towertalk] Pouring base of tower
>
>
>...ANOTHER COMMERCIAL SITUATION WHERE MULTIPLE PIECES OF CONCRETE ARE
>USED IS PILINGS
>
>There are pilings made out of reinforced condrete driving into the
>ground which end up supporting commercial structures....
>
>Sometimes these pilings have to go very deep before they hit bedrock and
>become solid enough that the weight of a building will not cause them to
>sink and the building fall over....
>
>These are typicall reinforced concrete sticks.....they are pounded into
>the ground like XXX ground rods when they get so low that they run out
>of rod and the ability to withstand weight is still ionsufficient they
>glus on another one... that's right - with construction epoxy the stick
>another one on the end of the embedded XXX(s) ... and if that one ends
>up being driven its entire length and they still don't have enought
>resistance, on goes another....
>
>Construction epoxies are not that uncommon anymore - while the
>quantities needed for a tower pad of two pour is significant enough to
>buy in bulk - freqently used anchoring systems for threded rod used to
>anchor the base of a house wall is sold in caulking type tubes for use
>with a special gun that handles the two part mix bia two plungers acting
>in unison to squeeze out the adhesive and hardener simultaneously when
>the handle is squeezed (smaller sized offerings are in double barrle
>syringes for "one bolt" emergency operations) - this has becoime cheaper
>than the old school method of setting anchor bolts in the wet slab and
>then drilling the plate at the bottom of the wall to match....a guy in
>the field with the rigth tools can march right down the line drilling
>the locations for the "to be eposies" thraded rods....
>
>As is true of most adhesives - when correctly applied they are actually
>stronger than what they hold together!
>
>73,
>
>Jim, K4OJ
>
>
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>




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