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Re: [TowerTalk] Heights aluminum tower

To: <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Heights aluminum tower
From: "Mike" <noddy1211@sbcglobal.net>
Date: Sun, 15 Aug 2010 16:35:18 -0700
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
As long as the tower is not a telescoping crank up style guying it should no
problem.  If it was a crank up that would do as you say and transfer
pressure on the cables and could cause failure.  Certain Tri-ex crank up
towers were made to be guyed and would use a mechanical stop on each section
to lock it in place.

Mike, K6BR

-----Original Message-----


Steve,

The thing that makes a self supporting tower self supporting is the big 
block of rebar reinforced concrete under it. Adding guys to a self 
supporting tower may actually make it fail because of loads introduced 
by the guys that were never intended by the manufacturer.

When the wind blows across guys, that force is transferred as a downward 
force through the tower to the base. Rohn 25/45/55 were designed to be 
guyed. I'm quite sure the Heights aluminum tower was not.

As the list moderator is so fond of saying "do what the manufacturer 
says to do".

On 8/15/2010 5:35 PM, Steve Sala wrote:
> What is it that makes a standalone tower stand alone?  without guys?  I
have
> a used Heights tapered aluminum tower which I am going to install sort of
> close to the shack to put my Vhf/Uhf yagis on to minimize feedline length.
> Is it because the taper makes the shape sort of triangular which, I bet,
is
> the most stable of geometric shapes (compared to a Rohn 25-45, etc. which
> all sections are non-tapered)?
>
> Would I affect anything by adding a set of guys so I don't panic as much
> when I climb it to install the sections and then the rotator and yagis?
> Even though the hole in the ground holding the three long bolts would be
> about 7 feet deep by  4 feet wide, minimizing movement is an objective
while
> I am up there.  I was thinking of three  Phillystran guys that I connect
to
> ground anchors when I am on the tower and then either removing them from
the
> ground anchors for operation or keeping them on for extra stability.
>
> This Heights tower is going to be 60 feet tall although it originally was
> 112 tall.  A friend topped it off later at 60 feet with a new flat plate
so
> he it would not interfere with his astrophotography in his yard.
>
> 73
> Steve
> K7AWB
> Nine Mile Falls, WA
> DN17es
>
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>    

-- 
R. Kevin Stover

ACØH

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