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Re: [TowerTalk] Lowering mast on fixed tower

To: Bob Gates <regates@kingwoodcable.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Lowering mast on fixed tower
From: "Jim White, K4OJ" <k4oj@tampabay.rr.com>
Reply-to: k4oj@tampabay.rr.com
Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2003 16:45:00 -0400
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>

Using
a comealong to lower the mast still begs the question of how to get this
contraption back up through the tower.  I don't see myself trying to lift 200+
pounds while anchoring my feet at the top of the tower.


Its the same same - the comealong is for both the lowering and raising - it actually is most likely easier to use for raising as "unwinding"/lowering is not as easy on a comealong as tensioning is...



A lot of comealongs come with a pulley on the line already -


if you attach that pulley at the high point this will give you some angle-ability,
you should then be able to operate the handle of the comealong outside of the tower - the body of it will have a hook on it that you can attach to a leg of the tower - an easy method is to use one of those prefabricate cable slings that has a loop at each end - you can marry that sling to the intersection of the diagonals and the tower leg so it cannot "walk" along the leg and then put both ends of the sling on the hook on the body of the comealong...


You will undoubtedly have to do this in a couple of iterations - make sure you have something to take the weight of the mast while you re-attach the pulling point and adjust the cable back onto the spool...

NOTE a good thing to have with you is a piece of angle stock that has a u-bolt on it in its middle - that u- bolt attaches to the mast and then you can lash on of the ends onto a tower leg and you will keep the antennas from wind milling... until you have tried to grab a mast that is twisting you do not realize how helpless your grip is on that 2" pipe as far as stopping a runaway breeze riding antenna - if you do not catch it it could end up ripping off the coaxes, etc...

IF you are servicing or replacing a rotor it is a good idea to leave the rotator in the middle of its rotation - usually N for us NA types - why?

IF you know where the rotor was last aimed you can then go ahead and bolt everything down when you are done without having some yell at you over the radio (r the winds) that the rotor says it is East by Northeast now... etc... NORTH is easy to remember, true or otherwise!

Good luck, Bob!

Jim, K4OJ



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