Sorry to hear about the broken rotor Jose.
In order to NOT miss the DXpedition, I suggest
putting a rope over one end of the boom and tieing
it down so that the beams are aimed in the desired
direction. A sling shot and fishing line can be used
to get over the boom, then pull up a light string, and
then pull up the tie down rope.
73 / GL, Tom N4KG
On Thu, 11 Apr 2002 20:21:58 +0100 "=?iso-8859-1?B?Sm9z6SBkZSBT4Q==?="
<ct1eeb@mail.telepac.pt> writes:
> Ok guys
> Theres always a first time.
> Only last week I was saying good things
> about the Prosistel heavy-duty rotator.
> Today we had strong winds peaking
> 100 Km/H, the crank-up tower was only
> 15 m. high (theres a 3 el. KLM 40m. beam
> and a small WARC beam up there), when I
> arrived home from work I noticed the antennas
> were rotating free with the wind.
> The Hex-screws connecting both parts of the rotator
> had unscrewed aparently breaking everything inside
> this Prosistel rotator.
>
> I just hope the warranty is still valid as I have this
> rotator for less than a year.
>
> Next time I will reinforce the fixing of this screws somehow.
>
> (I hate when this happens in a moment like this,
> in the eve of VK9ML, Hi!)
>
> 73 Jose CT1EEB
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Towertalk mailing list
> Towertalk@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk
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