They certainly are having a streak of bad luck with that tower.

I'd be curious what exactly happened, if they make the information public.

Back in the mid 50's, the new tower under construction at WSM-TV fell. A section of tower was dropped and struck a guy wire and severed it. Several workmen were killed.

The same thing almost happened to my tower while I was putting it up. I had it up to the 100' level, and had hoisted the next section up while standing on the ground and tied off the gin pole rope to a leg of the tower. I decided to take a short break and just happened to look back at the tower in time to see the section falling. I was afraid it was going to cause the whole thing to come down, but it hit a guy wire at the bottom set and bounced off. The whole structure violently shook, but everything held together. The only damage was a chipped guy insulator, and the tower section was ruined - one leg was bent about 15 degrees. I bought a replacement section and went ahead with construction. I never could figure out how that rope came loose, but from then on, I always made doubly sure that the rope was securely tied at both ends before I climbed the tower to attach the section. I think what saved the tower was that the falling section was still attached to the heavy rope, which ran up to the top through the gin pole pulley and back down to the ground, and that tremendously slowed down the descent from what it would have been with a free fall. Fortunately, it was the bottom knot that failed, not the top one. It didn't make any noise at all as it was falling. I'm lucky I wasn't standing under the falling section.

I put up the tower single-handedly, standing on the ground and hoisting each section one at a time, tying off the rope and climbing the tower to attach the new section, then moving the gin pole up to the top of the new section, climbing back down the tower to attach the next one, then repeating the whole procedure for all 13 sections. I got plenty of exercise climbing up and down that tower, but I would usually put up only one or two sections a day, and working mostly on weekends, it took me several months.

At the time I could barely afford the tower hardware itself, let alone hiring someone to erect it, or help me erect it. I started out with a couple of local ham volunteer helpers, but I quickly decided that wasn't going to work because everyone wanted to be boss, and someone could have got hurt with all the arguing and confusion, so I finished the job single-handedly.

Don k4kyv
______________________________________________________________
Our Main Website: http://www.amfone.net
AMRadio mailing list
Searchable Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
List Rules (must read!): http://w5ami.net/amradiofaq.html
List Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/amradio
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.html
Post: mailto:[email protected]
To unsubscribe, send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word unsubscribe in the message body.

Reply via email to