Most of my antennas that I installed were pulled up the side of the tower
but the few times that I did use a crane I just wrapped a strap around the
boom and attached it the crane hook. There is certainly nothing difficult
about doing this. I do not understand the man bucket unless you have two
cranes on the property - one for the installer. I used three come-a-longs
attached to the guy cables with old Big Grips while the tower was hanging
from the crane to rough plum it. From there it is easy to attach the
permanent Big Grips to the turnbuckles, which I had to do all of them
myself while the crane waited. A Loos gauge works well enough for setting
the tension. Installing two towers and all of the monobanders is quite a
long crane job.
John KK9A
To: "tower" <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: [TowerTalk] questions on the use of a man-bucket and guy
tensioning 5/16" EHS
From: "StellarCAT" <rxdesign@ssvecnet.com>
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 2016 20:17:01 -0400
Hello,
This is directed at those that have had direct experience with the use of a
crane and a man bucket.
My antenna/tower project, at least the major part of it (one of the two
towers)
is finally getting close to being done. I?ve ordered the crane for the end of
next week ... so I can get a man bucket for an additional $150. There are 6
large yagis to be installed ? well 5 and a rotary dipole for 80/75 which is
also BIG in that regard ... there?s currently 74? of tower up on the K0XG
rotating base and 2 rings ... I?ve built another 60? of tower with the second
ring on it ... that will go up first and the top section of guys installed.
then I have 14? of tower that will already have mounted on it (I hope) the
rotary dipole at the top and a 5 element 50? boom 20 mounted just above
the leg
of the tower (R55). That whole assembly will go up as one and thus 2 antennas
will be finished once this is bolted in to place.
Then there are 4 yagis to go up along the height of the tower from 124?
down to
45?. I had planned on just having a guy on the tower stuff (no choice
there of
course) ... and then have him climb down the tower as we go from the top down
with the 4 remaining antennas 124?, 90?, 75?, 45?. This means I?ll have to
lash
up the antenna on the ground to the crane hook and then of course the crane
will raise it up to him where he can hopefully bolt it in place (2 plates on
the boom already in place for the boom to tower mount).
But the guy that is doing the climbing is saying the man bucket will make
putting the antennas up easier. Having never used one I?m writing to get the
comments of those that have used one.
How is the antenna ?held? to the man bucket? And whatever that is does
that get
in the way of mounting the antenna when at the tower. I.e. you have the side
rails of the man bucket that would be ?hitting? the tower ? will the antenna
?move in? to position and still be SAFELY held until bolted in place?
Is it really any faster?
I assume it could be considered safer as the guy would be in the man
bucket and
not climbing the tower but obviously one expects whomever that is to be
careful
and always be strapped in when climbing ...
thoughts please?
And on another note: the top guys are 5/16? mixed with 11200# philly (50%)
...
how much tension do you need to pull out of the ?free? cable before attaching
it to the turnbuckle? I?m worried about not pulling enough and having to redo
the big grip ... on the bottom set of guys (the bottom 2 sets are 1/4?) I
managed to do just that ? I pulled too much and had to redo the big grip. Of
course on the 5/16? the worry is more that I won?t pull enough and will
run out
of turnbuckle adjustment space. Put another way: how fast does the tension go
up as one adjusts the turnbuckle? If the turnbuckle has 12? range ? will that
pull up even a relatively loose guy to full tension of 1100# before
running out
of adjustment room?
Gary
K9RX
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