OK, I have to say it. I was up 54 feet and to me that's a mile. Working to
take down a tribander and trees all around that had grown through the tower
and up and into the antenna. Calm day, mostly, a gust of wind moved all the
tree tops in unison and I thought the tower was falling. I grabbed the
tower hard enough I thought I bent the top. Not sure what that was supposed
to do except keep from bouncing once I hit the ground. Anyway, scared the
cr-- out of me.
73, de Jim KG0KP
----- Original Message -----
From: "jimlux" <jimlux@earthlink.net>
To: "Richard (Rick) Karlquist" <richard@karlquist.com>
Cc: "Martin Ewing" <martin.s.ewing@gmail.com>; <towertalk@contesting.com>
Sent: Friday, July 17, 2009 12:35 PM
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] World's toughest fixes - 2000' tower
> Richard (Rick) Karlquist wrote:
>> I am near some 2000 foot towers. According to the engineer
>> who built them, they basically don't move at all at the top.
>> He says he doesn't notice anything when the wind blows.
>>
>> Rick N6RK
>>
>
> Might depend on the tower and the wind, and, certainly some psychology.
> I've been up a several hundred foot tower, and it certainly moved. Not
> abrubtly, more like a sort of swaying with a period of several seconds.
> Not unlike standing on a dock, but smaller displacement. Hard to
> estimate the displacement though, because there's nothing to reference
> it to.
>
> For that matter, if the wind is blowing, even a solid rock pinnacle
> "feels" like it's moving. Maybe it's because once you get a few hundred
> feet up, you don't have a visual "ground reference".
>
> Jim
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