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On Mar 25, 7:03�pm, Mike Coslo wrote:
"Dee Flint" wrote : "Steve Bonine" wrote in message .. And all the logic in the world won't help if the local building official insists on using the worst-case scenario or local laws demand it. Frankly, if I was the local building official, I would use the worst-case scenario. The primary responsibility of a building inspector is public safety, and invoking the worst-case scenario seems appropriate in this case. No it isn't appropriate. *There are telephone poles near my house that if they were to fall will destroy my house. *My neighbors TREES could do the same. *Yet most people do not see these as significant hazards. *They are used to seeing them so do not think of them as hazards. It's not just familiarity, though. Buildings and utilitity poles are usually subject to detailed codes regarding their installation and maintenance. Those codes are based on extensive experience about what works and what doesn't. A radio tower is more of a custom installation and requires special attention. I agree that using the worst-case fall-circle rule for a properly-installed radio tower is usually more restrictive than is needed. There are situations where the worst-case scenario applies, IMHO: Field Day and similar temporary installations. In those cases, where a tower, mast, pole or antenna may fall should always be considered. Putting a Field Day station at the base of a temporary tower may look idyllic but is not a safe practice. Of course. People are used to things like Power poles and even think nothing of hurtling at each other in automobiles carrying liquids that are almost explosively flammable. In no way does that make either actually "safe". There's safety and then there's the *perception* of safety. Driving/riding in autos is one of the most dangerous things most people do routinely, based on the death and injury rates. They are not quite so used to radio towers however. People have a fear of the unknown, especially in thies days of safe rooms in houses, and burglar alarms in gated communities. There's also the Gladys Kravitz effect. And in these days of safety taken to stupid extremes, and housing developments that won't allow you to have a clothesline in your back yard, I'm not about to go complaining about that one little restriction on a potential tower. IMHO, that's how restrictions get a foothold. First it's some little rule that doesn't really seem to make much difference, even though it's grounded more in fear than in good engineering. For example, as Dee points out, the utility poles could fall over and cause extensive damage, but they're not restricted the way towers are. Then there's a little expansion of the rule. Maybe it's the fall circle plus ten percent. Or twenty five percent. A little here, a little there, and pretty soon you need a property a couple of hundred feet in every direction to put up a fifty foot tower. This may sound absurd, but I'm old enough to remember a time when, if someone suggested a no-antennas restriction on houses, they'd have been laughed at because practically everyone wanted to watch TV, and to do that required a decent outdoor antenna. Then cable came along and now they're SOP. --- btw, even the professionals mess up at times: http://www.damninteresting.com/?p=500#more-500 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/buildingbig/.../citicorp.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citigroup_Center 73 de Jim, N2EY |