[TowerTalk] Tower tipS - really long
Jim White, K4OJ
k4oj at tampabay.rr.com
Mon Feb 10 16:06:39 EST 2003
One of my more recent finds is using a new fangled boom to mast
attachment - I use HD structural steel angles (about 1/4" thick) which
are designed for two timbers coming together at right angles - typically
used in the Pacific Northwest where latrge dimension lumber is a bit
more reasonably priced since it grown out there... I have them custom
produced and hot dip galvanized....
The reason for this is:
It is an angle stock piece with gussets....each is about 5 inches on a
side and roughly 10 inches long...I have custom located holes prepped
for it - they are such that there are enough holes for three u-bolts to
attach it to the mast and this same hole pattern is also at the ends of
the piece....
The holes are in sets of 3.... a common hole which is near the "fold" of
the stock and the next hole is c2c 2 1/16" away....for a 2" u-bolt....
shari g that first hole there is a companion hole which is c2c 3 1/16"
inches away....
both sides of the angle stock are prepped identically so should you have
to use it on one side or the other of your mast you have what you
need.... and since the hole pattern is all the way around the holes on
the non mast side of the angle work for your boom - on BOTH 2" or 3"
diameter...
Why go to such a bother you ask....
When you are on top the most important thing is for you to be in control
of the antenna - if an HF antenna gets away from you retrieving it often
is not an option and down it goes... I only dropped a yagi once and will
never do it again.
By using a right angled bracket - once the beam is topside you simply
lower it onto the nice flat surface and voila you are NOT controlling
all that weight - it is sitting there - with only work needed other than
installing the u-bolts being keeping it from getting walked off the
angle by a gust of wind...
I hope I successfully described it for you....
I had to use this for a beam with a 2 1/2" boom recently and was about
to be upset with myself when I realised I could take the original
equipment plate and rework it... by rotating the manufacturers plate to
horizontal and drilling holes that matched the holes of the HD angle
bracket I was able to simnply set it on there and drop bolts through -
even easier than the original idea since the mfg's plate was u-bolted to
the boom and presented a large flat area that sat on the HD angle... I
stuck a phillips screwdriver through one of the hole locations and used
it to pivot the plate so that the other bolts lined right up - when I
think of 30 years of muscling antenna boom to mast plates into poistion
and simultaneously begging the u-bolts to go in to the holes and then
quickly slapping a nut on them only to find I wasn't quick enough - hell
- never again...
Once the angles are on the mast they stay there - when you take an
antenna down you take it off the angle...
I had a bunch of these fabricated at once to minize the "set up charge"
the manufacturer wanted - and - I had them hot dip galvanized after
production - they will be around longer than I will for sure!
Cost: A little over 20 bucks each - Effectivenss: PRICELESS!
-...-
Always do a run through in your mind of the job - think of every fastner
and tool you will have to use and bring multiple wrnches for that size
fastner - if you are wokring with 1/4" bolts bring up a Crescent wrench,
a socket, a deepwell socket and ==== I especially like these: a
wratcheting box wrench (great for u-bolts where you have to run the nuts
a long way down the threads)
-...-
Always bring up EXTRA fastners for the job - be it extra
nuts/washers/lockwashers/bolts.... it is much easier than having to
climb AGAIN
_..._
Always have the ground crew do the physical work - they are in a MUCH
better situation to exert themselves... they can put their backs into
their work with fear being a five foot fall :-) - you on the other hand
- well.... ALSO :
_..._
THE GUY ON THE TOWER CALLS ALL THE SHOTS...the guys on the ground need
to minimize their chatter and focus on what he is doing to the best of
their ability - the ground guys provide two things - muscle and
support... if a wrench is needed, post haste! Think of it as a military
exercise and the guy on the tower is your drill sargeant barking orders!
_..._
Previously mentioned on the reflector - the climber should start by
taking up a light line which will allow a work line to be established
for the parts/tools bucket.... oh yeah.... use multiple snap rings in
series on the rope to bucket attachment.... the initial snap ring atr
the end of the rope stays at the end of the rope for the next thing to
be lifted or lowered always... by then hooking another snapring onto
that one you can snap the second one onto a tower rung - have the gorund
go slack on the rope and them open the ropes snap ring and disconnect it
- this way you do not have to take the weight of the bucket - just snap
and unsnap it... AGAIN - let the ground crew do the work.
_..._
Ground crew always need to remember that the guy on the tower can see
things they cannot since he is right there - do not question the guy in
the air - he is the boss!
_..._
One of the best tower tips is to follow Towertalk - thanks K7LXC - good
job you olde fuddy duddy!
Cc: FCG Refletor
Jim, K4OJ
75 Days until the Florida QSO Party... details at:
http://www.qsl.net/fqp/
.
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