I am wondering if anyone of the Batboard Gurus has a good rule of thumb concerning antenna wind load and its effect on a tower load? For example, how do you judge when an antenna should or shouldn't be put on a tower or a smaller antenna should be used? I've looked at the formulas used to calculate total load for a tower but my eyes quickly rolled back in my head due to overload. Thanks for any suggestions.
Toby
KC0FRU
Question for antenna gurus: Wind Load
Moderator: Queue Moderator
Question for antenna gurus: Wind Load
If a train station is where a train stops, what is a work station?
Although a generic answer, the tower should have came with (and usually clearly advertised and known) what wind load the tower is capable of.
Base station antenna's are also rated for their wind load.
Basically, if you have the information for the tower you have and the antennas, its very simple. If you don't, a call to the manufacturer of both will produce the correct information.
Base station antenna's are also rated for their wind load.
Basically, if you have the information for the tower you have and the antennas, its very simple. If you don't, a call to the manufacturer of both will produce the correct information.
Lowband radio. The original and non-complicated wide area interoperable communications system


It also depends on what you are trying to achieve.
If your tower is rated at 150 mph and you put a bigger or more antennas than what it was designed for then the rating goes down.
The tower manufacturer should be able to conduct a load test for a few thousand dollars.
They require the antenna type, height, leg the antenna is on,feeder,
face or leg for the feeder and whatever else is on the tower.
I just had one done for $2250 including a PE stamp
If your tower is rated at 150 mph and you put a bigger or more antennas than what it was designed for then the rating goes down.
The tower manufacturer should be able to conduct a load test for a few thousand dollars.
They require the antenna type, height, leg the antenna is on,feeder,
face or leg for the feeder and whatever else is on the tower.
I just had one done for $2250 including a PE stamp
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Tower and antenna wind loading go hand in hand. You
start with the antennas and see just how much wind
loading they have. Next you design the tower to carry
at least 125 percent of the load you just came up with.
Bear in mind that the tower wind loading will vary with
how it is constructed, how and with what type of guy
cables are used.
As someone mentioned, don't forget to take into
account ice loading if that is a chance in your part of
the country.
Also make sure you know what the wind speed rating
is for the tower location.
Don't forget to add a fudge factor in for the coax
transmission cables. They add some wind loading
to the tower that will vary depending on how they
are attached to the tower.
As one well know old ham ( W1BU Sam Harris ) once
told me, "If it stayed up through the winter, the
antenna wasn't big enough". Sam was know for
putting up these massive antenna arrays for his VHF
and UHF long haul communications that he loved to
have. Even had some moon bounce antennas in the
yard. Several of his towers rotated, not the antennas on a rotator.
Jim
start with the antennas and see just how much wind
loading they have. Next you design the tower to carry
at least 125 percent of the load you just came up with.
Bear in mind that the tower wind loading will vary with
how it is constructed, how and with what type of guy
cables are used.
As someone mentioned, don't forget to take into
account ice loading if that is a chance in your part of
the country.
Also make sure you know what the wind speed rating
is for the tower location.
Don't forget to add a fudge factor in for the coax
transmission cables. They add some wind loading
to the tower that will vary depending on how they
are attached to the tower.
As one well know old ham ( W1BU Sam Harris ) once
told me, "If it stayed up through the winter, the
antenna wasn't big enough". Sam was know for
putting up these massive antenna arrays for his VHF
and UHF long haul communications that he loved to
have. Even had some moon bounce antennas in the
yard. Several of his towers rotated, not the antennas on a rotator.
Jim