[Antennas] Mast design equations & rules of thumb?
Don Havlicek
[email protected]
Thu, 04 Mar 2004 21:25:12 -0500
Oh ... why put the base at 11' ???
Seems that you're going to have radial problems if you do.
Don
N8DE
JAKidz wrote:
> Greetings:
> I'd like to build a tip up, free-standing 1/4 wave 40m vertical,
> base at 11 feet, out of small town available materials (e.g., chain link
> fence rail, electrical conduit, water pipe). No guys (small lot with a
> bunch of house stuff in the way) so support has to be close to the base.
> Due to CC&R's, I have to tip it up for use and down the rest of the time
> so wind loading would be moderate at most. What diameter and wall
> thickness does the base need to be to withstand repeated bending from
> being pushed up but not overkill? Only one old guy is the pushup force
> so it can't be 34 feet of 3 inch water pipe on top of the 11 foot base.
> I'm guessing that for less weight but adequate rigidity, it is best to
> have reduced cross-sections with height but how many and how long for
> each is optimum? I figure a Radio Shack steel CB whip can top it off.
> Any good thumb rules or design equations for such things? As fence rails
> and metal electrical conduit come in a variety of wall thicknesses, I'd
> like to run the numbers for some confidence that the thing isn't like to
> make a big dent in my noggin or my roof.
>
> Thanks and 73,
> John, K7JG.
>
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