Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old January 5th 05, 12:15 PM
Dee Flint
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Roy Lewallen" wrote in message
...
Hire somebody with a cherry picker? An arborist might be able to point you
in the right direction.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


I also agree with cherry picker idea. If you are comfortable going up in
them, you can even rent one of these and do the work yourself. Of course it
is still always wise to have a safety man on the ground if you go up
yourself. One of our local hams rents one whenever he needs antenna work
done and gets one of the club members to go up in it as he is way to hefty
to do this work.

Dee D. Flint, N8UZE

Bruce Wilson wrote:
. . .
And I have no idea how to do the former. How do I get ropes back on those
pulleys? Are there flagpole-riggers who shimmy up the poles, or do I hire
some brave local kid to risk his neck in the attempt? I really want to
get a proper antenna up there, and don't mind paying someone who does
this, I just don't know who to call.

Bruce Wilson KD7VEM
http://wilson.dynu.net


  #2   Report Post  
Old January 5th 05, 02:21 PM
David G. Nagel
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dee Flint wrote:

"Roy Lewallen" wrote in message
...

Hire somebody with a cherry picker? An arborist might be able to point you
in the right direction.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL



I also agree with cherry picker idea. If you are comfortable going up in
them, you can even rent one of these and do the work yourself. Of course it
is still always wise to have a safety man on the ground if you go up
yourself. One of our local hams rents one whenever he needs antenna work
done and gets one of the club members to go up in it as he is way to hefty
to do this work.

Current Federal requirements are for a 3 man crew when working above
ground. Two up one down.

Dave WD9BDZ



Dee D. Flint, N8UZE


Bruce Wilson wrote:

. . .
And I have no idea how to do the former. How do I get ropes back on those
pulleys? Are there flagpole-riggers who shimmy up the poles, or do I hire
some brave local kid to risk his neck in the attempt? I really want to
get a proper antenna up there, and don't mind paying someone who does
this, I just don't know who to call.

Bruce Wilson KD7VEM
http://wilson.dynu.net



  #3   Report Post  
Old January 5th 05, 03:39 PM
Allodoxaphobia
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Wed, 05 Jan 2005 08:21:03 -0600, David G. Nagel wrote:
Dee Flint wrote:
"Roy Lewallen" wrote in message
...

Hire somebody with a cherry picker? An arborist might be able to point you
in the right direction.


I also agree with cherry picker idea. If you are comfortable going up in
them, you can even rent one of these and do the work yourself. Of course it
is still always wise to have a safety man on the ground if you go up
yourself. One of our local hams rents one whenever he needs antenna work
done and gets one of the club members to go up in it as he is way to hefty
to do this work.


Current Federal requirements are for a 3 man crew when working above
ground. Two up one down.


This ain't a federal job.

rant
If it were, you'd have to file an Enviromental Imapct Statement before
ever modifying the existing 'structures, you'd have to file a Non-
Discrimination Certificate, you'd need to hire a Saftey Compliance
Office, you'd need to do Wetlands Mitigation, you'd need a review
by The Army Corps of Engineers, you'd be required to do a floodplain
study, you'd have to file I-9 forms for each member of the 3-man crew,
and for some vacuous reasoning du jour, you'd need to be strip-searched
by The Department of Homeland Hysteria, etc., u.s.w.

Thank gawd it ain't a federal job.
/rant

Yes, of course, be safe! Think safety.
Jonesy
--
| Marvin L Jones | jonz | W3DHJ | linux
| Gunnison, Colorado | @ | Jonesy | OS/2 __
| 7,703' -- 2,345m | config.com | DM68mn SK
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Max nr of poles in CW-filter ? Heikki Ahola Homebrew 6 December 10th 03 06:13 AM
Max nr of poles in CW-filter ? Heikki Ahola Homebrew 0 November 27th 03 08:34 AM
Earth as a "dipole" Alan Antenna 21 November 22nd 03 08:09 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:12 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017