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A question for all you that have guyed towers.

Captain Kilowatt

Professional Amateur
Staff member
Apr 6, 2005
17,260
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Nova Scotia,Canada
Well after 30+ years of having a freestanding tower and talking about their virtues while at the same time expressing my distaste for guyed towers and vowing to never own one, I find myself contemplating putting up a guyed tower. :headbang I don't want to mind you but it all boils down to basic finances. At this stage in my life I want to make any major tower and antenna purchases something that will last pretty much the rest of my days or at least until I am unable to climb any more. I also want something that is going to perform decently as well.Both of these requirements mean $$$$. To that end I narrowed the antenna selection down to either a Hygain Thunderbird series TH-11DXA for the five bands from 10m-20m or a Hygain Explorer-14 for 10,15, and 20m with a Hygain DB-1217 stacked above it for 12 and 17m.I'm leaning towards the two antenna option right now as the price is almost the same and the wind loading is nearly identical. Either decision will require the purchase of a new heavy rotator and an equally heavy duty tower to support everything. I priced the Trylon Titan series towers and choked at the price tag of over $4000+ tax and shipping for the bare minimum tower that would hold everything at 56 feet.I then turned my sights on the sixty feet of steel lattice tower I have over by the barn. It was originally an AM radiator at one of the sites I used to look after and is part of the original 220 foot tower. This tower is 24 inches on a face and each ten foot section weighs about 175 pounds and is made by Trylon.It is galvanized steel and has solid rod legs not hollow tubing. Three sections are 1 inch solid legs and three are 3/4 inch solid rod legs. Each size has 1/2 inch solid steel rod bracing. I just checked the specs for the Trylon 18 inch face towers and they are speced at being able to handle a 95 MpH wind while supporting 50 square feet of antenna at 60 feet high,more than twice the specs for Rohn-65G. I can't imagine what my 24 inch tower is rated for.Using what I already have will save me many thousands of dollars so I have decided to go with what I have right now. I will need to have a couple plates made up to support the rotator and top bearing but that is a no brainer. I may even top out the 60 foot Trylon with either one or two tapered 8 foot sections of Delhi DMX tower sections which I also already have, and are about 22 inches on a face.This will top out at about 75 feet with two sets of proper EHS steel guy wires,one at 30 feet and the other at 60 feet.The top 8 or 16 feet will require no guys as it is the bottom sections of a freestanding tower and is super strong. I figure with this tower arrangement I should be able to park a small sailboat at the top and not worry. (y) The only thing I have not quite yet figured out about this whole thing is how to deal with the guy wires while erecting the antennas. There are a few different ways to deal with them, one involves assembling the antennas on the tower which is truely a pain in every essence of the word. Another involves making a special boom/mast clamp that will allow the antenna boom to be rotated to a vertical position which still means assembling the antenna on the tower but making it easier to do so. Yet another way involves using a catenary as a tram line to haul the assembled antenna to the top of the tower. This is often a guy line if the line does not have any insulators inline. Mine will have. :censored: The last option is the most expensive one and involves a crane truck to lift the fully assembled antenna to the top and is not one that I am considering at this time but I may have to eventually.The big problem of course is that the guy wires converge at the top making it difficult to maneuver a large ungainly antenna around them. Even if I go with the smaller dual antenna arrangement each antenna will still have a 14 foot boom and 30 foot long elements and weigh in around 35+ pounds each making for some serious grunt work trying to get the antennas past the guy wires. If I have to go with the crane truck I will have to get everything ready and have the antenna(s) fully assembled before the tower goes up and may as well have the truck stand the tower up as well and as soon as the guys are secure have him lift the antennas up. I suppose that way I would get the best bang for my buck in rental fees.What method have you guys used to combat the guy wire problem?
 

Just something else to consider concerning the one antenna or two antenna thingy. That's gonna be one heluva mast to support both of those antennas.
- 'Doc
 
CK,

You mention early on in your post about having a system in place that will last a while and at the same time not wanting to climb. "At this stage in my life I want to make any major tower and antenna purchases something that will last pretty much the rest of my days or at least until I am unable to climb any more." I feel the same way as you but from an economic stand point differ with you. You already know antennas need periodic checking. Why not save yourself some trouble and go ahead and spend the extra bucks for a self-supporting crank up fold over system that will allow you to work on the system when you need too. I think I would like the convenience of being able to work on my system without having to hire someone to come and help me when something goes out of whack. Granted the up front costs are great but the end result will give some peace of mind when maintaining the system could become an issue. If I was able to work on the system myself then that lets me stay on the air and not have to wait until help gets around to fitting me into their schedule. Of course you know what you want and are willing to pay for, but I'm just looking at it from another perspective.

73

Wayne C.
 
Put up 100 feet of tower with 3 levels of guys. Use ring rotors for the antennas. No mast to mess with. Use the tippy top for VHF and don't forget to use it as a center support for the low band doublet.

Do you have the original tower swivel base? Guyed towers are dramatically stronger when used this way.

How about torque arms?
 
CK,

You mention early on in your post about having a system in place that will last a while and at the same time not wanting to climb. "At this stage in my life I want to make any major tower and antenna purchases something that will last pretty much the rest of my days or at least until I am unable to climb any more." I feel the same way as you but from an economic stand point differ with you. You already know antennas need periodic checking. Why not save yourself some trouble and go ahead and spend the extra bucks for a self-supporting crank up fold over system that will allow you to work on the system when you need too. I think I would like the convenience of being able to work on my system without having to hire someone to come and help me when something goes out of whack. Granted the up front costs are great but the end result will give some peace of mind when maintaining the system could become an issue. If I was able to work on the system myself then that lets me stay on the air and not have to wait until help gets around to fitting me into their schedule. Of course you know what you want and are willing to pay for, but I'm just looking at it from another perspective.

73

Wayne C.

I hear what you are saying but in reference to my comment about not climbing, I still have many years ahead of me yet,I'm only 46. :D I figure when I can't physically climb any more I'll hire it done and if that becomes too expensive then a good ground mounted vertical with a mile or so of radials looks good to me. :D

I just cannot even justify the expense of a crank up fold over tower. For the height I want and the heavy duty I need to handle the antennas in the wind and ice loading area I live in plus the raise and lowering fixture and freight pusses the price to right around $10,000. Already priced one from US Tower. The other problem is that I use all LDF4-50 heliax because the run will be about 200 feet and that becomes a problem with flexibility when raising and lowering the tower sections. Nice to have but unrealistic unless I hit the jackpot. :laugh:
 
Perhaps an outside the envelope thought, may not work with your current tower configuration as a hazer requires a straight non angled tower.
 

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