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#1786 |
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Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Woodbridge, ON
Posts: 292
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Thanks stampeder! I'll go for the steel.
Lobo |
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#1787 |
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 155
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Hi,
There is an old tower that has frozen bolts that I want to loosen so that I can disasseble the 3 ten foot sections and take a closer look at them and clean them up. Are there any suggestions for doing this other than using wd40 regularly over a period of days and tapping them to try to disengage them. Also, if I wanted to clean them up (the 10 foot pieces are a bit rusty), are there any recommendations? Sorry if this is the wrong place. Thanks |
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#1788 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Kitchener, ON
Posts: 4,105
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I've used a pipe extension on my ratchet as a "force multiplier". This usually does the trick.
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DMX 68' tower, HyGain HAM 5 rotator, Antennas Direct 91-XG & C5, Channel Master 7777 preamp, Siemens surge protection |
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#1789 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Port Stanley, ON
Posts: 207
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Envirogeek:
The other thing you need to be aware of is the load limitation for your particular tower installation. A DMX tower will have a maximum of 3 square feet of wind surface area for the antenna you place at the top. If you desire to increase this figure, you will need to guy your free standing DMX tower.
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Delhi DMXHD 48, SFA 1483, SR 1047, CM7778 |
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#1790 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Calgary - Shaw phone & internet, 4 bay OTA in attic / Pigeon Lake - CCI Wireless, 8 bay OTA on roof
Posts: 532
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Thanks Gentleman,
The highest priority for me is the internet. I will have to make my tower decision after the installer comes out for another attempt at getting a signal on Wednesday. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that I might be able to get away with a roof mounted 10 foot mast and tripod to put me approximately 30 feet AGL, but all my calculations suggest I need at least 40 feet to clear the trees surrounding me for LOS to the ISP's tower. If I can even get a suboptimal but usable signal for my internet with the trees now filling in, I'll do some figuring on surface area after I see how big a device I am left with. If I was to combine the CPE and an 8 bay bow tie antenna on the same tower, could I factor in that the CPE would be pointing into the prevailing NW wind for the largest percentage of the year, with the bowtie across the prevailing winds aimed generally NE? If the wind load turned out to be too much of a concern I would likely not include an OTA antenna on the tower. |
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#1791 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Kitchener, ON
Posts: 4,105
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roger1818, but that 10' mast on a 5' tripod will have about 3' within the tripod itself...only netting an elevation of about 7'--less if the tripod legs are mounted below roof peak, which they typically are. Even then, I'd be hesitant to put a large antenna on it, such as an 8 bay, or 8-bay and vhf combo.
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DMX 68' tower, HyGain HAM 5 rotator, Antennas Direct 91-XG & C5, Channel Master 7777 preamp, Siemens surge protection |
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#1792 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Kitchener, ON
Posts: 4,105
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envirogeek, I'd be hesitant to vary accounting of wind load of antenna equipment by factoring the direction of prevailing winds relative to antenna direction.
I hope that made sense? Wind load is wind load. Most WISPs operate at high frequency, so LOS would definitely be necessary. And the antenna is typically smaller...thus minimum load.
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DMX 68' tower, HyGain HAM 5 rotator, Antennas Direct 91-XG & C5, Channel Master 7777 preamp, Siemens surge protection |
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#1793 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Montreal
Posts: 2,248
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I plan on bolting a 3 ft tripod to 2 - 2x6 pressure treated boards, on a flat roof. The antenna is a CM4228, on a 7 ft mast in the tripod. I plan on "shimmming" up one leg since the roof actually slopes down, inward to the middle for the drain. The roof is newly installed membrane (looks likelong strips of shingle material) which I assume covers a real welded membrane...)
In any case I intend on placing some sort of rubber mat under the wood. I plan on using about 10-11 12"x12"x1" patio blocks over the wood as weights. This about 250 lbs. I am not sure if this is TOO much weight, possibly damaging the roof membrane ? and Im not sure if rubber mat is correct material to place underr boards ? I do also plan on using a 3-guy wire system to stabilize the mast... Any comment is appreciated, thanks (And, Yes, I did search the other threads regarding this, but no specific answer was found) |
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#1794 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Calgary - Shaw phone & internet, 4 bay OTA in attic / Pigeon Lake - CCI Wireless, 8 bay OTA on roof
Posts: 532
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Thanks Jase88,
As a sailor I'm thinking of wind load as windage and weight aloft. Given as a value in square feet my first response is to picture the surface being acted upon. I would kind of expect wind load for devices aloft to be given in cubic feet and/or weight. The Zyxel unit the first installer brought out was probably no more than 1 square foot. The first location we tried in January was definitely trying to shoot through some trees. I think I have one possible location on my roof that will work, otherwise it's tower time... I greatly appreciate the responses from yourself and Gentleman. I will take them into account and report back later this week. |
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#1795 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 890
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Quote:
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If Life is a Highway,...then why is there no end to this dirtroad? |
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#1796 | ||
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Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Ottawa (Stittsville), ON, OTA (Radio Shack Omnidirectional Antenna and 5Y6S in Attic), MythTV HTPC
Posts: 5,605
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Quote:
Given that argument (if for some reason you want to ignore the elevation gained by the tripod itself), a 5' mast on a 3' tripod will have about 2' within the tripod itself...only netting an elevation of about 3', so the the the 5' tripod with a 10' mast I suggested will give you more than twice the elevation (you need to compare apples with apples). If you need more elevation than that, either guy the mast or go with a tower. Quote:
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Link to my TVFool results is in my profile Homepage URL. I suggest others do the same. |
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#1797 |
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 155
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Thanks for the ideas - I think Dirtroad's nutbreaker is what I'll do...since the nuts and bolts are toast anyway
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#1798 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Ottawa (Stittsville), ON, OTA (Radio Shack Omnidirectional Antenna and 5Y6S in Attic), MythTV HTPC
Posts: 5,605
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^^^Just make sure you replace them with the exact type recommended by the tower manufacturer. Wade sells replacement nuts/bolt kits for their towers.
__________________
Link to my TVFool results is in my profile Homepage URL. I suggest others do the same. |
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#1799 |
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 155
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How do I figure out what kind of antenna it is - I didn't see markings. Would photos help idetify it - although it looks quite rusty but feels stronger than it looks. I have photos if that could be used to identify it - and whether it is worth keeping
well the pictures are in my profile - probably not salvageable but maybe there is something that can be done to bring the thing back to life! |
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#1800 |
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: gatineau, pq /// db4 attic mount + hdp269 /// roof-top 91xg + hdp269
Posts: 47
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(i hope this is the right forum -- can't see where else i should post this question)
a few surprises delayed my plans, but now i'm about to install that j-mount on my roof (stm-1000 from a-d), to support a db8. i have built a base into which the j-mount will bolt into (see included picture) and wanted to confirm with others that it is sturdy enough. using the foot of the stm-1000 as a guide, i have marked the spots where the lag bolts will be (obviously screwed from the outside) to make sure this assembly was big enough. i will use a fine+long bit to drill outwards from the inside to have guide holes visible from the outside, which i will then use to drill the required holes for the lag bolts. ![]() (i've pointed to the 4 "guide spots" with arrows) as you can see, the base is just 5 lengths of 2x4 grouped between two roof trusses. they are attached to the trusses using 3 inch wood screws, with some pl premium between them to make sure they don't twist/bend due to heat & humidity. so, does this pass muster? thanks in advance! Last edited by tmp31416; 2012-05-29 at 09:43 PM. Reason: typo |
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