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Re: [TowerTalk] Ring Rotors

To: John Webster NN1SS <nn1ssnh@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Ring Rotors
From: kq2m@kq2m.com
Date: Mon, 30 Jan 2023 20:03:06 -0600
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>

Hi John,

I have two Rohn 45 towers (130' and 100') and four rotatable sidemounts (swinging gates) on the 100' tower which holds four Hygain HG105CA and four HG155CA yagis. These are turned with T2X and Ham 4 rotators.

The sidemount at 37' used to stall during rotation because it was slightly off vertical and the TB3 above it was too tight, causing it to bind when it reached the same position each time. If you can't get the mast perfectly vertical and the sidemount perfectly horizontal, what you can do is either substantially loosen the Thrust-bearing and keep it very loose or if you need more "play", you can remove the thrustbearing entirely. That solved the binding problem. It was the one sidemount on which we did not use a level to ensure that it was perfectly aligned. That was an important lesson I learned and a mistake that I never repeated. ;-)

Regarding rotation around a tower on a sidemount, normally you should be able to achieve 240 degrees minimum. HOWEVER, with a little extra work and foresight, after you find the 240 degree rotation point, if you change the angle of the sidemount then you should be able to rotate it more around the tower; almost to 300 degrees.

When you get the sidemount in place, play with it instead of tightening it and you will see what you need to do to get that extra ~ 60 degrees. With ~ 300 degree rotation you will be close enough to almost any direction that you need.

Excellent idea using star guys. I have two sets of star guys at 80' and 120' on my big tower (which has no sidemounts yet). I believe that the extra stability plus 6 extra guys is the only reason that the tower is still standing after two hurricanes (including Sandy with 120 mph wind gusts), three tornadoes and dozens of icestorms, Nor'easters and microbusts.

73

Bob, KQ2M



On 2023-01-30 18:54, John Webster NN1SS wrote:
Wow. This is the first time I've posted here and I'm blown away by the
number and quality of the responses.

Some more detail... The 404C sits just above a star guy bracket with three sets of Phillystran 6700 to each guy anchor. You can see it in detail on my QRZ page. As many of you have mentioned, a side mount rotor solution has
definitely been contemplated. I have a Rohn 45 top section that I'm
thinking could be used if bolted to the tower. I did this once with a 6 ele
10m yagi and used a swinging gate to get something like 275 degrees of
rotation. The problem I had with this configuration was, if the mast
holding the antenna was slightly off vertical. the rotor would stall. But that could have been fixed with a better rotor. I moved and took the whole
thing down so I never got to try that fix.

Short of using the ring rotor I'm probably happy if I can swing the antenna
in an arc between 45 degrees through to 270 degrees passing through 0
degrees. That arc would give me EU, Asia and the US. I have an OCF dipole on a 70' tower that works fine to the south. African mults are a bit of a
stretch but I can make it work.

At this point I'm thinking that I could make the Rohn 45 top section
side-mount solution work if I mount it properly. I have to consider the
star guy bracket that would be just under the antenna and I don't really want to move the 404C any closer to the C31JK that is 10' above it. There is already some interaction between the two antennas on 20 and 15 (the 404C
boom looks like a 20m reflector - something that is fixable but I don't
want to make it any worse).

Anyway, that's where I'm at right now.

John
NN1SS
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