Jim Clark KB0FIR/5 pugluvers@worldnet.att.net OK thanks for the tower help, folks, here's the next question. In the Dallas area, so ice can occasionally be a problem for the quad. Your advice, please
I'm puzzled by this statement. You shouldn' t be waiting for the city to give you a suitable height. You should give them the height. According the FCC ruling PRB-1, local authority can not limit the
The city is not "required to okay any height you need", and if you take that attitude with them you may be tied up in red tape for a while. But, in Texas they are required to "reasonably accommodate"
FCC Try http://www.arrl.org/field/regulations/local/prb-1.html The reference in Part 97 is 97.15(e), which provides as follows: (e) Except as otherwise provided herein, a station antenna structure ma
Hi Jim. I had a quad up here for a long time till the wind blew it into the next county. It was at 30 feet and worked quite well. One thing you can do in an ice area is to put the quad in a diamond c