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My good friend K1LWI has been a ham for many years. K1LWI lived in Quincy in a house with a lot of heritage and stories from previously families. He was infected with the CW bug early in childhood. He had a great set of parents. K1LWI’s father worked at the Quincy shipyard. When K1LWI asked if he could build a tower system from the 1952 ARRL Handbook, then K1LWI’s father sought engineering assistance from a co-worker in the shipyard’s engineering department.
K1LWI made several modifications over the years. The tower was a tilt-up. The Tilt occured right at the base of the tower. He used a block and tackle by the house to support the tower during its descent onto a-frame. Now, perhaps you do not know this, but K1LWI’s tower was made of wood. It was unguyed except for the modification in the later years to support a taller mast. The tower was a bit over sixty feet. Remember ROHN 25G requires at least two guying points for the equivalent height.
After some discussions with people about cubical quads I became interested in the design so I asked K1LWI about cubical quads. He told me that he used them for two years on top of his wooden tower. I was absolutely amazed.
I soon learnt that other people had wooden towers in the areas south of Boston. One fellow had a huge tower with a decent size work platform eighty feet in the air for his VHF/UHF antennae; I do not think that the ham really did any HF work in his latter years. He only did intensive work on the upper bands.
K1WCC sent me an email with a little information about W1TJW. W1TJW also had a wooden tower of at least eighty feet in height down in Falmouth. He did not have guys either.
One of the hams that has given me a lot of help since I passed my examinations several years ago is K1RV. He told me about his wooden tower! I am quite amazed. K1RV and his father purchased a wooden tower made by W1BBP. W1BBP was moving to Florida and needed to remove the tower from his old house. K1RV used a boat trailer to push the tower with ten fellows from the Capeway Radio Club across the streets of Weymouth without any car or truck. This reminded me of the time that I carried an extension ladder and a 20 feet-plus CB groundplane across the streets of Abington sans automobile in the pursuit of aluminum.
K1RV even told me that K1DFJ(his elmer) climbed the tower to repair the rotator up on the tower once. I have heard many stories about K1DFJ and he had not bounds, which I find remarkable for his handicap. Unfortunately, K1DFJ was blind. K1RV told me that his mother was in shock when she found K1DFJ up on the tower busy as he worked diligently on the rotator.
Ham radio is often about people working together to build things. It like a Mutual Admiration Society.
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