Another improvised "leverage amplifier" is a large tire iron used to 
mount/unmount truck tires. Years ago a contractor gave me one of these, it's 
about 5' long made of really hard 3/4" steel. It does NOT bend, and has a 
nice tapered lip on it for where it's supposed to pry the tire rubber on/off 
the wheel rim. Works great as a big pry bar and I have used it on the tower 
to make all the bolt holes line up when using the tilt-over feature. I never 
thought about using it to correct bent side braces but I'll bet it work 
super, and is also small/light enough to fit between nested tower sections.
 Don't know where a person would buy one, but it might be possible to rent 
one for a couple bucks from any tire repair shop that services tires for 
semi's.
GL es 73
Dan
K0DAN
 -----Original Message----- 
From: Bob K6UJ
Sent: October 19, 2012 04:06 PM
To: towertalk@contesting.com Talk
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Crank up tower bracing rubbing against cable
 Thats what I did to tweak my two bent round bar braces braces back out on my 
tower.  I used a pry bar and slid a 10 foot length of 2" water
pipe over it for extra leverage.  Didnt need to be that long but it was what 
I had on hand.  Just a little nudge at a
time and keep checking does the trick.
Bob
K6UJ
On Oct 19, 2012, at 11:45 AM, TexasRF@aol.com wrote:
 
Jonathan, this sounds like a recipe for disaster! 300 to 500 pounds of
force is one matter; making sure you don't exceed that with a vehicle is
another  matter. I have seen no 500 pound fuses.
Another consideration is if the tower can handle that much force. 500
 pounds at the end of a 20ft lever (telescoped tower) is 10,000 ft 
pounds/12000
inch pounds of over turning force!
A longer crow bar can be as simple as the existing crow bar with a length
of pipe slipped over the end.
73,
Gerald K5GW
In a message dated 10/19/2012 1:20:48 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
jj_2_woo@yahoo.com writes:
Hi  All,
Thank you the replies.  I also received many replies in  private.  Many of
you suggested of bending the bracing with a crow bar or  hitting it with a
 piece of wood.  Well, I tried both methods today and  neither of them 
worked.
I would need a really long crow bar to bend that  thing.  The wood method
didn't work as the wood absorbed all the  pounding.
I have an idea that might work and save me a lot of  time.  My tower is
 very close to my driveway.  I could tie a cable  to the bracing and attach 
the
other end to a winch or a vehicle.  With a  300-500lb force I should be 
able
to bend the bracing just enough to clear the  interference.  When 
retracted
the tower should be able to withstand the  pulling force, I hope.  Since I
 don't have a winch I will have to ask my  neighbors for help.  I will 
report
back on my progress and result.   Thanks and 73.
Best Regards,
Jonathan Woo, W6GX
(970)  646-1711
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