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Re: [TowerTalk] [Tower Talk] A tub to receive my coax

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] [Tower Talk] A tub to receive my coax
From: Jim Lux <jimlux@earthlink.net>
Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2012 09:31:36 -0800
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
On 12/31/12 9:21 AM, Larry Loen wrote:
Wow, I've received a bunch of _very_ ingenious answers, but as they were
mostly private, I won't post them.

Still, it suggests some added clarifications:

1.  As I live in Arizona, there is a summer 'monsoon' season with serious
lightning potentials.  Some colleagues here tend to leave their tower
retracted in the summer when DX is scarce and lightning is more common.
I've seen cloud to ground out here out of clouds that aren't even _raining_
yet.  Lots of it, in fact.    So, I'm planning on at least some periods of
time with the tower routinely retracted.  Lightning strike potential, per
year, is at least as strong here as anywhere else I've lived.  It may be
the dessert, but lightning doesn't seem to care.


If lightning hits the retracted tower, and travels down the coax shield (as it is likely to do), then you might wind up replacing the coax near where it touches the ground.

This is an interesting take on the usual "bond the shield to the tower at the top and bottom" advice because the configuration isn't fixed.


3.  Because the tilt over will be at least sometimes there and because the
finish on the cement is fairly rough, I don't want to see the coax and
control cable scuffed.  Someone suggested I might consider netting to
"catch" the coax on lowering.  That is an option to consider.

or cheap sacrificial carpet/astroturf/wood on top of the concrete that you just replace when it gets too ugly?
the arms.  That really would be my preferred solution.  Some have suggested
giving up on remote raising/lowering and guiding the coax with some sort of
control ropes (I presume, dacron ropes).  That would be another way to deal
with the snagging problem.

Interesting.. you could also do what they do with the control/power cables for moving bridge cranes and the like.. they have loops and clips that run along a steel messenger line. Think shower curtain and shower rod. With a suitable spring loaded retractor, you could have a straight messenger line along side the tower.

I don't know if that saves anything, but it would mean you could do away with the standoffs sticking out from all the intermediate sections. You'd have just one at the top and the "stretchy steel cable" reaching to the bottom from it. Do the loops and attachment to the cable sliders right, and you might wind up with an "autocoiled" cable nicely hanging there. They make a sort of split loop stuff with a spring steel member that tends to coil in a preferred direction (you see a version of it on those pneumatic masts on TV trucks, for instance).


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