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  2. Radio masts and towers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_masts_and_towers

    The antenna used for broadcasting through the 1920s was the T-antenna, which consisted of two masts with loading wires on top, strung between them, requiring twice the construction costs and land area of a single mast. [2] (pp 77–78) In 1924 Stuart Ballantine published two historic papers which led to the development of the single mast antenna.

  3. Whip antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whip_antenna

    If it was infinitely thin the antenna would have an infinite input impedance, but the finite width gives typical, practical half wave whips an impedance of 800–1,500 ohms. These are usually fed through an impedance matching transformer or a quarter wave stub matching section (e.g. the J-pole antenna). An advantage is that because it acts as a ...

  4. List of catastrophic collapses of broadcast masts and towers

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_catastrophic...

    Tallest ever mast aboard any ship. It was replaced by horizontal wire antenna between two shorter masts. KTUL Tower Coweta, OK: December 26, 1987: Lattice steel guyed tower 582 Ice storm Listed at 1909 feet a mast in NRTA Transmitting Station 501, Anning, Kunming, Yunnan, China: January 1988: Guyed steel lattice mast 143.5 Material fault and ...

  5. Antenna types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antenna_types

    A sloper or sloper dipole is a half-wave wire slanting down from a single elevated mounting point. It is usually fed at its center with the feedline cable itself slanting away at a perpendicular counter-slope from the sloping antenna wire, towards a small pole or a ground anchor near the base of the mast.

  6. Mast radiator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mast_radiator

    By 1930 the disadvantages of the T antenna led broadcasters to adopt the mast radiator antenna. [9] One of the first types used was the diamond cantilever or Blaw-Knox tower. This had a diamond (rhombohedral) shape which made it rigid, so only one set of guy lines was needed, at its wide waist. The pointed lower end of the antenna ended in a ...

  7. Inverted vee antenna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_vee_antenna

    An inverted vee antenna is a type of antenna similar to a horizontal dipole, but with the two sides bent down towards the ground, typically creating a 120- or 90-degree angle between the dipole legs. It is typically used in areas of limited space as it can significantly reduce the ground foot print of the antenna without significantly impacting ...

  8. Guyed mast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guyed_mast

    The mast can either support radio antennas (for VHF, UHF and other microwave bands) mounted at its top, or the entire structure itself can function as a mast radiator antenna (for VLF, LF, MF). In the latter case, the mast needs to be insulated from the ground. Guyed radio masts are typically tall enough that they require several sets of guy ...

  9. List of tallest structures in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_structures...

    The second-tallest structure in Nevada is the Moapa Entravision Tower at Moapa, a 426.7 m (1,400 ft) tall guyed TV mast at Moapa erected in 2008, the third-tallest is the 401 m (1,316 ft) tall Moapa Kemp Tower at Moapa, the fourth-tallest is Stratosphere Tower near downtown Las Vegas, which was erected in 1994–96 and reaches 1,149 ft (350 m ...

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