
This week 15 year-old Owen and 14 year-old Grant came to my QTH for three straight days while they were on Spring Break. They were really eager to help Grandpa with his EME station construction project. AND, Grandpa was extremely glad to have their help!!! A lot of what they helped me do were things they had never done before. Plus, they did things that they had never even SEEN anyone do before!
The boys are now big enough to wear my tower climbing safety gear so they got some very valuable experience in tower construction. On the right you can see Grant pulling up and placing the Hazer cage at the top of the tower. (Click on any image to see it larger.) This was his first time actually working at height and he was a little unsure about whether he could reach up above the top of the tower to place the Hazer cage. So, he secured the cage to the top of the tower and his brother, Owen, gave it a try.


Before the top section of tower was raised, we needed to construct a Pulley Block for the Hazer winch wire. This mounts at the top of the tower and provides the point where the Hazer Pulley is attached. This did not come with my used Hazer so Owen cut and drilled a piece of C-Channel for attachment of the pulley and the U-bolts to attach to the tower legs. (See photo on left.)

At this point the boys had to go home sooner than we expected. Unfortunately, this left Grandpa to climb the tower, pull up the winch cable, thread it through the pulley and drop it to the ground through the center of the tower, put the last three bolts in the leg joints, remove the Gin Pole, wind up the rope, and put everything away. WHEW! That was a LONG two hours of work that the grandsons could have done in about 30 minutes.

To finish up from our Day 1 projects, Owen drilled two holes for a second U-bolt in the new winch bracket for mounting it to the tower. We then had 100-feet of new winch cable to attach. Since the tower is only 28-feet tall it turned out we only needed 50-feet. So, Owen got the Dremel tool and he cut the cable in half. That leaves me with a spare 50-feet of cable if something happens to the cable that is now in place. On the left you can see the winch installed on the tower with the Hazer cage above it.

We had some difficulty as the original holes were drilled from the top down before the wall was dry-walled. That wall sits on top of a steel I-beam so our options for drilling were limited. I ended up drilling at a steep angle a half dozen 3/4-inch holes to make a very ragged opening. I think I managed to do that without damaging any of the cables that were already in place. We had also carried with us the azimuth rotor control cable, the RX feedline (LMR400-UF) and a 500-foot roll of 4-conductor shielded cable. We then ran those up through one of the previously drilled holes into the shack.

After dinner the grandsons decided they wanted to try climbing the big Rohn 45G tower down over the hill. Both went up the 85-foot tower and were amazed at how much better the climbing felt on the bigger tower (the EME tower is Rohn 25G.) The photo at the right shows Owen at about the 50-foot level.
The boys decided to stay the night with us so we had a great time relaxing that evening. We watched part of a movie until Owen decided he needed to hit the sack. Grant just feel asleep on the couch!
The next morning we decided to finish the exit method for the cables from under the house. It was simplest to just bring them through an existing vent hole. That hole is covered with an automatic vent cover. Grant and I took it apart and we each worked on one half to cut a hole in the cover to pass a 2-inch (I.D.) piece of PVC. You can see a photo of the finished vent cover modification on the left.

While we were starting to fish the Heliax under the house a very strong storm front moved through unexpectedly. It caught us off-guard and we had to dry off the tools after quickly moving them to the back porch. Once the rain passed, Owen helped me measure out two 100-foot lengths of the 4-conductor shielded cable, marking both ends of each with colored tape for identification. Grant made a speed run through the crawl space and fed those wires up through the wall. That completed the running of 6 of the 9 cables that must be run under the house. Only the elevation rotor control cable, a 12 VDC and 28 VDC cable now need to be run to complete the cabling under the house.
Those three days of help from my grandsons has helped me to complete the major parts of the tower construction process. I can finish most of the rest of the project on my own since the infra-structure is now in place. Many thanks to Owen and Grant for giving me three days of their Spring Break to get all this work done. They are the BEST!
No comments:
Post a Comment