China is building infrastructure.  Meanwhile, we are dismantling our old 
infrastructure so we can send scrap metal to China.

From: Chuck Hogg 
Sent: Tuesday, October 06, 2015 8:31 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Free 6 ft size, 6 GHz high performance dish,you haul

I hired a group to remove 8 of them off a tower.  Jay Panozzo owned it before 
me and he hired a group to do it and all they removed was the Heliax.  They 
used a beasty gin pole and a nice winch to remove it all.  Took them 3 days.  
Had to cut most of the bolts off.

Regards,
Chuck

On Mon, Oct 5, 2015 at 11:12 PM, Ken Hohhof <[email protected]> wrote:

  Apparently the list doesn’t allow .kmz attachments.  Try this:
  lat  41°50'40.24"N
  lon  88°55'23.13"W

  From: Ken Hohhof 
  Sent: Monday, October 05, 2015 10:06 PM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Free 6 ft size, 6 GHz high performance dish,you haul

  If you open the attached placemark in Google Earth, you can see 3 cornucopias 
lying on the ground.  The two recent removals are plainly visible, the third 
one was removed years ago off the concrete tower and brush has grown around it 
making it harder to spot.  I believe 2 are AFC fiberglass horns and probably 
have zero scrap value, the 3rd is an Andrew metal horn.

  I remember reading that the 4 delay lens antennas on the upper deck of the 
concrete tower were brought in by helicopter to restore that tower to 
historical accuracy.  That deck almost looks like a helipad, on a calm day you 
could probably land a helicopter on it.


  From: Ken Hohhof 
  Sent: Monday, October 05, 2015 9:54 PM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Free 6 ft size, 6 GHz high performance dish,you haul

  There’s always the helicopter option.  I found a video of taking down a 
cornucopia (conical horn) with a helicopter:
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mU1J1D6CpaE


  From: Eric Kuhnke 
  Sent: Monday, October 05, 2015 7:18 PM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Free 6 ft size, 6 GHz high performance dish,you haul

  It's possible they attached the dishes to the final tower segment before 
raising it with a gin pole attached to the second-to-last tower segment?  

  Or the original install involved a big truck crane raising the dish, two guys 
with two separate tag lines tied off on the front left/right sides of the dish 
to keep it under control, and a couple of guys on the tower to mount it.


  On 10/5/15 5:00 PM, Craig House wrote:

    I have wondered the same thing.  I have talked to a crane company about 
removing them just to free up the wind load they create but for the cost of the 
crane I'd think I could do it myself if it were not for the issue of not having 
an attachment above the dish.  The top dishes actually are about 2 feet above 
the top of the tower.


    Craig



----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From: "Eric Kuhnke" mailto:[email protected]
    To: [email protected]
    Sent: Monday, October 5, 2015 6:40:55 PM
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Free 6 ft size, 6 GHz high performance dish,       
 you haul


    I wonder how they got the dishes on the top of that in place originally. 
Crane?� Based on my knowledge of rigging methods, I'm trying to figure out in 
my head a way to establish an anchor and pulley above those dishes to lower it 
with a steel cable and winch, but they're right at the top of the tower. Or 
vice versa, to raise one following a cable path at a 35-45 degree angle...

    There is a 25-floor building near here with a nice 8 ft size 6 GHz Andrew 
dish. I could have it for free. It's built from heavy gauge everything and 
probably weighs 600 pounds. The only way to get it down now would be a 
helicopter, it's been up there 25+ years.


    On 10/5/15 4:21 PM, Craig House wrote:

I have six of them on the tower that are 8 foot and 12 foot size if anyone 
wants to come get them off the tower they can have them


       

Sent from my iPhone

On Oct 5, 2015, at 18:17, Eric Kuhnke mailto:[email protected] 
wrote:

It's located on a hilltop in Bo, Sierra Leone. Bring a capable 4x4. Photos 
attached.

Any takers?  :)




<IMG_20150227_122749.jpg>
<IMG_20150227_130030.jpg>





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