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On 10/9/2014 10:19 AM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"rickman" wrote in message ... Why is a guyed ladder a "Rube Goldberg contraption"? All that matters is the strength of the materials and the mechanics of the design. I expect a ladder designed to carry 250 lbs of person to be more than up to the task of holding a 15 lb antenna. Likely much more so than most of the antenna towers that would be used for similar applications. For short time usage such as field day I am sure it is ok. For long term usage at home I don't think I would do it with a very large antenna. Ladders are designed to lay on a wall at a certain angle. That is why the legs are sort of an I beam type of construction. They are not made to take sideways torque like a large beam would put on with the wind load. I'm not sure what "sideways torque" is exactly, but an I beam is an I beam. I don't think a ladder has any inherent weaknesses that would preclude it from being used as a mast. Masts often have a rather smallish diameter pipe at the top. The structure of a ladder is much more substantial than that. With adequate guy wires I expect a ladder would make a very good mast. The only real issue is that of cost and convenience. I haven't priced tower sections but I know long ladders are not cheap. -- Rick |
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