I had to heat the lightning spike with a propane torch, there is a copper  
rod soldered to a hole in it. Have someone else pulling the thing out while  
you heat, after you remove the 3 screws already mentioned of course.
 
chris
N9LLO
 
 
In a message dated 9/9/2009 5:35:51 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
 
 
It has been a long time, but....I remember that about where the  clamp for 
the ground radials is there are 3? large screws. Remove the  the screws and 
the whole antenna will slide out of the radome by  pulling on the RF 
connector. The black stuff bonds the aluminum mounting  sleeve to the fiberglas 
and 
you don't have to fiddle with that  part.
 
as always - YMMV
 
Best Regards, Eric W1EL

Eric Lowell
Eastern Maine  Electronics Inc.
48 Loon Road
Wesley ME  04686
[email protected]
www.satnetmaine.www


---  On Wed, 9/9/09, hbbcara <[email protected]>  wrote:



From:  hbbcara <[email protected]>
Subject: [Repeater-Builder]  Rebuilding a Stationmaster
To:  repeater-buil...@to:  To:
Date: Wednesday,  September 9, 2009, 1:01 AM


 
Hi all,

The repeater-builder website mentions rebuilding a  Stationmaster that has 
developed noise by taking it apart and  resoldering the sections. I have a 
Stationmaster that has developed  that noise so I brought it down the hill. 
The replacement antenna  cured the noise, but it's not the same class of 
antenna so my coverage  area is not what it was nor will that antenna survive 
the winter. Now  comes the project of actually rebuilding the broken  antenna.

Upon starting to take it apart though, a big question  came up. Are there 
Stationmaster models that can and models that can't  be rebuilt? I don't have 
the model designator of mine. The antenna  predates my association with the 
site (in the context of maintaining  it anyway) and the label is largely 
faded away. I can read "Phelps  Dodge" and "Super Stationmaster" but that's 
about it for the label.  The antenna is for 2 meters and is 21 feet, 6.75 
inches long from the  bottom of the metal base to the top of the metal topcap. 
The thing  that worries me as far as being able to take it apart is that 
there  seems to be something like epoxy between the radome and the metal  base. 
There's a black substance at the junction of the radome to the  base and 
upon taking the three screws out of the side of the metal  base I can see the 
layer of metal, the layer of the black stuff, the  layer of the radome and 
then the inner metal that the screw goes  into.

Can someone who's taken these apart tell me if that black  substance is 
indeed bonding the parts together and I'm stuck looking  for a new antenna, or 
with all the screws out and just a little more  force will it indeed come 
apart?

Thanks for any pointers and  73

rj
kb6ytd










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