[TowerTalk] guy posts math
ak4qa
ak4qa at msn.com
Thu Jul 16 17:33:09 EDT 2015
If you read my message, the formula that I am asking for includes those variables.
Not trying to be snarky but I am a engineer, just not a structural engineer.
You may have just been trying to be helpful and the texting may have not communicated that. However your response seemed a bit condescending.
I am fully aware of railroad rails being used but I do not want to make a educated guess.
Again, let me reiterate looking for the 'formula' so no guess work is involved.
73,
Lee
AK4QA
Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device
-------- Original message --------
From: Cqtestk4xs at aol.com
Date:07/16/2015 2:41 PM (GMT-06:00)
To: ak4qa at msn.com
Cc: TOWERTALK at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] guy posts math
Suggest you contact an engineer. Wood is a far different material than whatever you are using. Variables include: diameter of the pipe, thickness of the wall, whether the interior is filled with concrete and rebar. Anything you might come up on your own is an educated guess at best . I'm not a big fan of guessing on a 100 ft tower.
Some guys use a steel girder as the post.
Bill K4XS/KH7XS
In a message dated 7/16/2015 7:24:58 P.M. Coordinated Universal Time, ak4qa at msn.com writes:
Does anyone have a the formula for guy posts?
I have a friend that wants tall guy posts (7 feet) for a 100 foot tower so he can walk under them. I need to show him the stress that is involved in that as opposed to 2 feet out of the ground.
I've always used the wooden pole rule of thumb; for every foot up you need 3 feet down.
Also, if you have the calculation for the back guy (i.e. earth screws) well my friends, that would be gravy on my biscuit!
All the best and
73,LeeAK4QA
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