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[TowerTalk] Rohn 25

To: <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: [TowerTalk] Rohn 25
From: N8GAN@CONCENTRIC.NET (KENNETH KOCH)
Date: Wed, 25 Mar 1998 18:44:55 -0500
but...but...but..they said it can't be done!
now look what u done....
ken   n8gan   73...

----------
> From: Stan Griffiths <w7ni@teleport.com>
> To: Rick Bullon <kc5ajx@hotmail.com>
> Cc: towertalk@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Rohn 25
To: <towertalk@contesting.com>
> Date: Wednesday, March 25, 1998 6:34 PM
> 
> > With all the discussion about Rohn 25 and windloading etc. You have 
> >almost convinced me that trying to fold over my Rohn 25 tower not only 
> >isn't going to work but that the tower is only good for uhf vhf 
> >antennas!!! 
> >  Well I guess the TH6 is going to stay in the barn for another 3 or 4 
> >years and I get to keep using my Butternut vertical for my only antenna.

> >It is ashame too as I have 5 empty acres and all I can do is a lousy 
> >vertical makes me lose all incentive to upgrade
> >  Not flaming anyone just upset that I can't do anything better that 
> >what I have. It wouldn't be so bad if I lived on a small city lot
> >73
> >Rick
> >kc5ajx  (tech plus forever)
> 
> Hi Rick,
> 
> I have had 102 feet of Rohn 25 successfully installed since 1973 with the
> following antennas on it:  At 112 feet:  5 element 10 with 20 foot boom. 
At
> 102 feet:  6 element 15 with  32 foot boom.  These two antennas are
rotated
> together with a Tailtwister.  At 70 feet:  4 element 10 with a 12 foot
boom
> fixed on the SE.  At 55 feet: 4 element 10 on a 12 foot boom.  At 50
feet:
> 4 element 15 with a 20 foot boom.  These two antennas rotate together on
a
> homebrew sidemount for about 300 degrees.  This tower also supports one
end
> of an 80 meter wire sloper and one end of a 160 meter wire sloper both
tied
> to the top of the tower.  It also has a two meter ground plane at about
60
> feet and a commercial pager antenna at 90 feet (a 2 inch diameter
vertical
> about 8 feet high and offset from the tower about 18 inches).
> 
> The tower is set solidly in concrete and guy wires (four sets guyed three
> directions) do all the work.  I used very good earth anchors purchased
from
> a utilty supply company set 6 feet below the surface and I use 3/16
> galvanized wire rope (4200 pounds breaking strength), 1/4" forged
> turnbuckles, 500D strain insulators every 20 feet in each guy, and mostly
> crimp on copper sleeves as cable clamps except in a few places where I
use
> conventional wire rope clips.  The thing looks as solid as the day I put
it
> up.  I would hesitate to put any more stuff on it but I have no problem
> climbing to the top to work on the antennas.
> 
> For those who will tell me it is overloaded, it probably is, but I put it
up
> long before I was smart enough to know that and its peformance history
tells
> me it probably will not fall down at this stage in its life.  I feel safe
> with it.
> 
> Stan  w7ni@teleport.com
> 
> 
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