I often see masts mounted on remove TV trucks that look very robust and are raised and lowered by compressed air, electric motors or hydraulic lines. Can anyone point me in the direction of some manu
Probably the most common (at least I've had them on every truck I have used or built) mast on TV trucks is by Wil-Burt Manufacturing in Orrville, Ohio. At one time the "standard" was a either 48' or
Correct ... I had to replace a 56' mast on a TV remote truck last summer and the mast alone (air system, etc. was already in place) ran very close to $10,000 (through our truck builder). I no longer
Hello Stephen - Contact Force-12; they are working on the latest and greatest as we speak! Regards, Ken -- FAQ on WWW: http://www.contesting.com/towertalkfaq.html Submissions: towertalk@contesting.co
Steve, We have several customers who build these ENG vans, trucks, military RF and power vehhicles and broadcast control tractor trailers. One is "Wolf Coach". Their tel # is 508 791 1950. Another id
Lo, Pneumatic masts are also quite popular with the military, so it might be worth checking surplus stores and similar sources. Most are designed only to take a small UHF array, a couple of lamps or
I have two 40ft military surplus air-operated Clark masts here. The section length is 6ft and the whole thing nests down to about 7ft which is very convenient to work on. The handbook says it can be