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Re: [TowerTalk] AN tower

To: towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] AN tower
From: David Gilbert <xdavid@cis-broadband.com>
Date: Fri, 19 Jun 2015 17:30:26 -0700
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>

Well, in my case, I had to allow for some ridiculous wind issues here at my QTH and I wanted to make sure that whatever tower I put up would handle any large antenna (or wind generator) I might one day decide to install on it, since I certainly was only going to have one tower ... ever. I live on an easterly hillside near the south end of a mountain range where the dominant wind direction is from the southwest. The winds that get blocked by the south end of the mountain range recover in the form of swirlers that roar down the hillside and across my lot like a freight train. Spring thermals bring wind gusts every three to five minutes that often reach 70 to 80 mph, and I've seen days where 90 mph is not uncommon. The strongest I've recorded was greater than 100 mph, and that on a clear day.

So I bought the strongest tower I could reasonably afford, although the Trylon might be the better value in terms of cost versus utility. To each his own.

I do agree that the foundation seems to be overkill, though, and mine took 20 cubic yards of concrete. That's roughly 40 tons worth planted six feet in the ground, and if the tower was five times stronger than it is now I bet it would still fail before the foundation budged.

The rebar cage design looked odd to me as well, but I didn't have any problem at all building it --- as the pictures on my web site show.

Shipping (from Pennsylvania at the time) was also expensive. I bought mine in 2008 and the freight cost to southern Arizona was almost $1200, and it would probably be even more now.

No doubt about it ... my tower and antennas have far and away been the most expensive aspects of my ham radio addiction.

73,
Dave   AB7E




On 6/19/2015 10:29 AM, K7LXC--- via TowerTalk wrote:
Howdy, TowerTalkians --
I've installed dozens of towers at amateur and commercial sites over
the years and I have found the AN towers to be battleship  stout (which in
many cases is not necessary for a ham installation) but  expensive to buy and
install.
One of my major complaints is that the base design is WAY overbuilt
compared to all the other towers I've installed. The last one  specified
approximately 3 times the amount of concrete than for similar towers  from other
manufacturers. To me it's a pure waste of time and money for the  unneeded
additional concrete.
Also the rebar cage is overly complicated in its design. I've built
many rebar cages but I had to hire a concrete contractor to  be able to build
it per their spec. Even the concrete contractor was scratching  his head
over the design.
To me, this is another instance of an engineer working in an air
conditioned office who designs it but never has to be out in  the field to
install one. (They're not the only manufacturer to do this.)
For a similar tower height and capacity, anyone installing a Trylon
Titan tower would save up to $3000+ by buying it rather than  the AN. Just
offering a money saving option.
Yes, I sell Trylon towers but that's because I've found them to be the
best value in a self-supporting tower around and lots of  people are
interested in that.
Cheers,
Steve     K7LXC
TOWER TECH -
Professional tower services for amateurs
Cell: 206-890-4188
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