ABOVE THE CLOUDS - WPEC ANTENNA ROTATION

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  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2021
  • A team of skilled professionals wrestle an 8-Ton Television Antenna on top of a 1,000 foot tower in South Florida.
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Комментарии • 274

  • @johnburns6422
    @johnburns6422 10 месяцев назад +13

    These are the unsung Heroes of Broadcasting and ill bet they don,t get the big money the so called stars of radio and television get ,These are the real heroes .

  • @dongarrow618
    @dongarrow618 11 месяцев назад +18

    I have nothing but 100% respect for people that perform jobs of this nature. I worked in a chemical plant and have been 200 feet on distillation columns so I have a rough idea of what they do.

  • @davechapman7735
    @davechapman7735 Год назад +24

    I'm going to get a full body harness to wear while I watch vids like this

    • @dougtaylor7724
      @dougtaylor7724 16 дней назад +3

      I once ripped the fabric off the recliner arm trying to hang on. I would feel better tied in to the chair. 😂

  • @joeanon5788
    @joeanon5788 Год назад +34

    I knew a guy who ran an installation crew. When he was in Africa doing a job, Orangutangs would come out of the jungle to see what was going on. Eventually they climbed on the tower and hung out with the crew, just hanging by their arms, swinging and swaying at 1000 feet up. No fear. He said, "I wanted to give them wrenches and get them to work, they were naturals."

    • @HiramFufa-ot6ni
      @HiramFufa-ot6ni 2 месяца назад +8

      There are no orangutangs in Africa.

    • @tedc7714
      @tedc7714 3 дня назад

      I was about to mention that but you beat me to it. Sumatra and borneo. Hehe. None in Africa. Haha

    • @royreynolds108
      @royreynolds108 2 дня назад

      @@tedc7714 Unless they are in a zoo.

  • @thomasnelson2463
    @thomasnelson2463 Год назад +9

    I'm a crane operator, I don't mind heights, as long as I'm looking UP at them. Those guys are CRAZY!

  • @RedBud315
    @RedBud315 2 года назад +14

    Just before they head down after finishing they get an "Oh, wait a second. While you're up there can you change the light bulb?"

    • @gasgas2689
      @gasgas2689 3 дня назад +1

      How many Russian Choristers does it take to change a light bulb? One thousand. One chorister to change the bulb and 999 choristors to sing the praises of the heroic deeds of the deceased bulb.

  • @Sandylaner63
    @Sandylaner63 10 месяцев назад +7

    I've got the exact pair of blue handled grips in my toolbag , but the highest they have ever been or ever likely to go is 25 feet ,,, I feel proud of myself for just watching the whole video ,,jeez these guys are really something ,,they have my full admiration,,

  • @brianshaw5360
    @brianshaw5360 2 года назад +16

    I used to do this, things are alot easier doing work down from the top of the tower once there's a gin pole involved its a whole lot more work and alot more dangerous mad respect for these guys

    • @asdf9890
      @asdf9890 Год назад +1

      I never have seen a gin pole, immediately thought that's a very intelligent design/work aid.

  • @wattheheck6010
    @wattheheck6010 2 года назад +9

    I imagine the guys really good at working from these heights don't brag about it much. Thanks for posting. Awesome video.

    • @asdf9890
      @asdf9890 Год назад +2

      The ones that do probably don't last long. They get asked to do one sketchy assignment and they quit and go get a job touching the dirt!

  • @mattjack3983
    @mattjack3983 2 года назад +3

    BULLMOOSE PRODUCTIONS...That is freaking awesome! Love the tribute to the Bullmoose himself, Teddy Roosevelt! 🇺🇲🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @mramaretto114
    @mramaretto114 2 года назад +13

    Mad respect, i hate to do this kind of metal&metal bolts,heavy weights works on the ground, cant imagine the patience to do it in a way like that above the clouds, no time for a coffee and very limited space to lay of your tools and confined by safetly lines etc. Stay safe and thanks for the work.

  • @doctorsocrates4413
    @doctorsocrates4413 2 года назад +7

    No...not even once..utmost respect to all who do this.

  • @eezyclsmooth9035
    @eezyclsmooth9035 2 года назад +35

    I worked in construction for many years. Whenever we saw the "Iron Workers" come onto to the site and do what they do,
    we were always amazed and in awe of their Fearlessness. These guys are more fearless!

    • @la7dfa
      @la7dfa Год назад +5

      You lose your depth perception at about 100ft. So it is just a bit windier higher up. I have been climbing up to 200m, and it did feel safer than some small towers with fewer security measures.

    • @deborahchesser7375
      @deborahchesser7375 Год назад

      @@la7dfa your right, I’ve been up a few times, after 100’ feet it’s not much different. Looking down an elevator shaft is pretty wild too.

    • @skipjack5964
      @skipjack5964 Год назад +1

      I helped erect free standing towers back in the 80's for att and we build them in sections on the ground we took 2 cranes and flip them upright then we took the crawler crane then we stacked them one on top the other highest I went was 300 and 5 feet. We had a winch truck and block and tackled the microwave dishes to the tower.

    • @eezyclsmooth9035
      @eezyclsmooth9035 Год назад +4

      @@skipjack5964 Thanks for input. In Houston, TX many towers are located in one particular area. Many years ago a tower was being erected. A local
      resident happened to be filming the job. What he captured was a Horrific and Tragic accident. As 1 of the final section was being hoisted up several
      hundred feet up. A bracket on the cable failed. There workers on the section, sadly they did not survive. I will Always have a deep respect for Tower Workers.

    • @richpayton7162
      @richpayton7162 Год назад +2

      For several years I worked on towers up to 304'. I'm sure climbing this antenna's height could seem scarier, but if there was a vertical velocity mishap, the results would be similar and final. Nice view from near the apex...

  • @hornet6969
    @hornet6969 Год назад +4

    The people who do this work ( TV broadcast towers) are a exclusive club.

  • @johnioannou5597
    @johnioannou5597 Год назад +6

    You feel like you are up there with them and my fear of heights make my palms sweat.

  • @dctw4678
    @dctw4678 9 дней назад +3

    We do work on LMR sites 300 ft or less and watching these guys use a gin pole at 1000ft is wild to me... Shout out to the guy with no shirt on, no hiding from the sun at 1000ft.

  • @grantjohnston6152
    @grantjohnston6152 Год назад +8

    I know that having the tools tethered would slow things down and be a pain but the possibility of one falling is certainly increased with no tether...dangerous. Gotta hand it to iron workers though, fearless!

  • @noway2844
    @noway2844 2 года назад +8

    It's amazing these towers can hold so much and carry these guys on that also. Prolly cause the only thing they carry is a lack of fear. Yall rock.

  • @mattd1142
    @mattd1142 3 месяца назад +3

    I gotta give huge credit to these guys. I’ll fly open cockpit biplanes and things like that no problem, but this. I don’t think I could do what these guys do.

  • @dwightr8590
    @dwightr8590 13 дней назад +2

    It’s Blue Collar Workers like these guys that Make 🇺🇸 Great…. Kudos 👍👍 to the 4 in the Air and their support guy on the ground…👍👍

  • @Nekzuris
    @Nekzuris 2 года назад

    Crazy operation!

  • @hl8256
    @hl8256 2 года назад +8

    Rigging the gin pole always amazed me. Years back we'd ride the tugger basket, it was air operated, had a friction brake the tugger operator controlled so you talked real nice to him unless you had new kid in the basket you wanted to scare the piss out of.

  • @jasswear8911
    @jasswear8911 2 года назад +4

    Florida man doing the job in Beach Shorts.

  • @moci42
    @moci42 7 месяцев назад +3

    I get the willies watching tower people work on these things.

  • @MAHONEY1940
    @MAHONEY1940 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video. Wish I had been up there.

  • @edjovi3677
    @edjovi3677 3 дня назад +2

    that was great to watch wow nuts to be up that high !!!

  • @jaimerodriguez9141
    @jaimerodriguez9141 2 года назад

    Good job, work safetly always.

  • @donalfinn4205
    @donalfinn4205 Год назад

    Very well done! 👏 Subbed.☘️👍

  • @tannerdamico9895
    @tannerdamico9895 10 месяцев назад

    I can tell this is a pretty cool job

  • @jedgeled759
    @jedgeled759 Год назад

    thats a whole new meaning to having guts !!!!!

  • @fredm5245
    @fredm5245 Год назад +1

    Compliments from a retired rigger who can relate to this. Watch one helicopter project I was on. Top off kaukau 1990.

  • @curvebuster
    @curvebuster 6 месяцев назад +1

    🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
    Excellent FE proof video.
    😉

  • @DaveSParty
    @DaveSParty 3 дня назад +1

    These men (and women, if there are any) earn Every penny - and I hope it's a bunch. Even the hoist operator as he has to be on his toes all the time too. I sometimes get woozy looking down at my shoestrings!

  • @Steven-tx9dg
    @Steven-tx9dg 2 года назад +2

    That’s was crazy!! Have y’all ever done this exact type of thing before?? You probably make great pay but it’s not enough!!!

  • @GuaranteedEtern
    @GuaranteedEtern Год назад +2

    So cool to have the basket travel up a guy wire like that - saves the guys climbing so much!

    • @the_towerhand1873
      @the_towerhand1873 10 месяцев назад +2

      Not up a guy wire. It's a tag line rigged to the tower along with the load line.

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network 6 дней назад

      Traveling up a guy wire adds too much off axis load. One man alone can for repair or inspection but not that much weight

  • @user-dd1bb4tw4r
    @user-dd1bb4tw4r 2 года назад +7

    I'd have a real hard time trusting my life to a single discolored steel cable..

  • @roberthardy2013
    @roberthardy2013 7 месяцев назад +2

    That belch at 8:30 tho, bet it was heard five miles away !

  • @dansteel9873
    @dansteel9873 19 дней назад

    Bolts up nuts out guys.

  • @afvet5075
    @afvet5075 9 часов назад

    The pucker factor is off the scale.

  • @dougpreston3409
    @dougpreston3409 2 года назад +5

    I would not have been able to move even one finger at that height. Frozen in fear!

    • @mattjack3983
      @mattjack3983 2 года назад +3

      Its definitely not for everyone, that's for sure. I was a rigger for several years, and whats crazy is before that, I had an intense fear of heights. I got over it tho with some "exposure therapy", and I really enjoyed my time working in the sky. Learning how to completely trust your harness, and understanding that its going to do exactly what its supposed to do, and its not going to allow you to fall, was a big part of me being able to calmly and confidently work several hundred feet in the air.

    • @scottwheeler2494
      @scottwheeler2494 Год назад +3

      Once you are above 20 feet it does not matter how high you go… a fall is gonna kill you. My grand father and father were both iron workers. My grandfather had incredible balance. Even a 70 he could walk a chain link fence. He worked before OSHA and all the safety regulations. It was each man for himself. There were lots of black stamps in his union book (they signified a payment into a fund to payout to a dead man’s family). They paid with their bodies… both had multiple surgeries to repair their backs and necks by the time they retired. But it was damn good paying work, especially during the depression for my grandfather.

  • @brucehall5267
    @brucehall5267 2 года назад +3

    Jumping the pole. Whoop ! Coming up easy. When the squeeling stops. Uh hold your load operator. Something is hung up. Bang! Bang! Coming down easy !!

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network 6 дней назад

      What crews actually use whoop and bangbang? None of my riggers on two 1500 footers did or had heard of that, other than some tv show.

  • @richh650
    @richh650 2 года назад +16

    That lift must be strong carrying all of the weight of those guys massive balls into the sky. In all seriousness those in this profession are greatly appreciated heroes. Communications is what drives this world.

  • @MikeDent
    @MikeDent Год назад +9

    Great work! Thanks for filming and sharing this. I bet the worst part was putting those fibre glass panels back over the sector antennas!

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network 2 месяца назад +1

      There is no film involved. It's an electronic camera.

    • @MikeDent
      @MikeDent 2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for the correction. I’m just off to hoover the front room.

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network 6 дней назад

      Using an electronic camera, recording on memory media. No film was involved. Thus, not filming. Recording.

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network 6 дней назад

      ​@@MikeDentWith a Dyson, no doubt

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network 6 дней назад

      ​@@MikeDentDo you Ford over to the store?

  • @joeanon5788
    @joeanon5788 Год назад +6

    My friend also told me about some instances of what happens if they accidently drop a wrence or a nut or bolt.If dropped, they yell "headache", so that noone under them looks up. He said one guy caught a 9/16 wrench across his face and it opened up real good. Another time, someone dropped a wrench, and it hit someones car parked at the bottom, and went through the engine.

    • @richpayton7162
      @richpayton7162 Год назад +1

      When I and my crew were rigging a weather tower on Vandenberg AFB in the mid-eighties, we had a very young and green junior (his first job out of school) engineer who wouldn't climb and basically tagged along, milling about smartly down on the terra firma.
      It took about 20 min. to reach the top at 304'. When we got about half way up he would try to take a nap in the Dodge Prospector work vehicle. Nope, about every ten minutes he got a wake up call with a golf ball sized piece of duct seal to the roof of the vehicle. Rang like a bell and so did he. He had a good sense of humor though, so it was all in good fun. And yes it was done safely, the truck and its contents survived.

    • @The_Red_Off_Road
      @The_Red_Off_Road 9 месяцев назад +3

      There is no way it went through the engine. Maybe through the engine bay, but it’s not going to make it through an engine. Terminal velocity is around 130 mph.

    • @joeanon5788
      @joeanon5788 9 месяцев назад

      The weight of a chrome plated 9/16 open end box wrench must be around a 1/2 pound, now at 130 mph, someone would have to calculate the kinetic energy of such a wrench and then calculate the strength of a cast iron engine block, and of course the engine is only so thick in places..... just relaying what they said, I was not there.@@The_Red_Off_Road

    • @OttoByOgraffey
      @OttoByOgraffey 7 месяцев назад

      *no *one . Two words. Noone is the lead singer for, 'Herman's Hermits.' Peter Noone.

  • @BuildBreakFix
    @BuildBreakFix Год назад

    wtf after watching this I'll never be right again lol Though never was to start with 🍺🤣👍 amazing job!

  • @jthepickle7
    @jthepickle7 10 месяцев назад +1

    We had to do this all the time, to the TV antenna on the roof - but not since we got cable.

  • @train4905
    @train4905 9 месяцев назад

    Awsome😊

  • @brucehall5267
    @brucehall5267 2 года назад

    That there is what ya call the wedding cake. Get ya some of that !!

  • @bellowphone
    @bellowphone 2 года назад +1

    "How was your day, hon?"
    "Oh, you know, the usual. Got hoisted up in a cage to the stratosphere, and stuff. What's for dinner?"

  • @timfarmer648
    @timfarmer648 2 года назад +1

    I built a 1200 foot tower in Florida for branch erection it had a 360 platform All sections came from FT WORTH tower. I loved building towers in Florida. 🤠👍

  • @BartzabelAlgol
    @BartzabelAlgol 2 года назад

    I would love that job!, that's something I would enjoy so much I'd never miss a day of work!!.

  • @alanclark639
    @alanclark639 9 месяцев назад

    I met up with two crews doing work to the transmitter tower here in U.K. at Croydon - not so famous as the one a few miles away at Crystal Palace, London but probably serves more people through the many signals sent out. Despite being sited on hills, both of these installations are babies compared with this one! Great work between all the guys - I was wondering how much load that derrick rig would take especially has its head block would never reach directly over the antenna - some deft chain block pulling going on. That mounting plate is some piece of kit compared with the tower sections eh?

  • @UQRXD
    @UQRXD Год назад +1

    That antenna will make hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • @COWBOYBARNMAN
    @COWBOYBARNMAN 9 месяцев назад +2

    This is horrifying! I feel like I'm going to have a heart attack just watching this.

  • @skeeter197140
    @skeeter197140 Год назад +1

    It's good to see they're wearing hard hats in case they fall.

  • @ralphcrow3881
    @ralphcrow3881 9 месяцев назад

    Wow.

  • @TheNameOfJesus
    @TheNameOfJesus Год назад +5

    I had to re-watch the start of the video because I didn't really grasp how that yellow extension was attached and raised. Now I get the idea, but there should have been more video covering how it got up there.

    • @ridingwithralseek1224
      @ridingwithralseek1224 2 месяца назад +1

      You'll have a climber most likely climb the entire way with a rope and at some point you split the weight like when you climb your partner lifts up the rope beneath him so you're only climbing with 100 feet worth of weight instead of 300 feet

    • @ridingwithralseek1224
      @ridingwithralseek1224 2 месяца назад +1

      Someone will also climb with a block, which the rope slides through. Then they'll rig cable to the rope, replace the block for the one with the cable and hoist the gin pole up, I don't know the rest as I've not worked with gin poles but getting it up there would be the same as hoisting other objects.

    • @philipjones9458
      @philipjones9458 2 дня назад

      I was thinking the same

  • @garlandremingtoniii1338
    @garlandremingtoniii1338 2 года назад +3

    I stopped watching it for about 5 minutes and then came back, To post this message. Everybody that reads my comment should do this.
    If you want to know just how dangerous climbing towers really is then do this. Google these words.
    “ what is the percentage of death pertaining to men that climb towers for a living?”
    Also this. “About how many men die each year that are TOWER CLIMBERS????”

  • @billynomates920
    @billynomates920 8 месяцев назад

    yeah. i don't fancy that!

  • @jesusischrist1527
    @jesusischrist1527 2 года назад +4

    9:12 100% safe just went out the window 🤣🤣🤣 ... There was probably a safety man with binoculars couple miles down the road having a stroke 🤣🤣🤣 ... Be safe man

    • @alekseicalhoun856
      @alekseicalhoun856 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, that was pretty stupid. Unless he had another tether below we can’t see, in which case it’s not too bad buttt doesn’t seem like it lol

    • @savagenomore
      @savagenomore Год назад

      he snapped onto the cable of the basket

  • @Dezmon2jz
    @Dezmon2jz Год назад

    No way y’all are posting so many violations 😭 my boss would be pisseddd

  • @JoeR203
    @JoeR203 2 года назад +2

    Scary. But not scarier than the lady standing on top of the Burj Khalifa for a tourism ad. I bet she was thinking "Can't this just be done with CGI?"

    • @richpayton7162
      @richpayton7162 Год назад +1

      The drone vs. Falcon races held there were really cool. Racing from the top to the ground, I think the Falcons always won those events.
      Goes to show you, Man will race just about anything that moves against just about anything else that moves. And place wagers on the outcome lol.

  • @dhansel4835
    @dhansel4835 9 месяцев назад +2

    I had a tower company come to my house to repair my ham radio antenna that a hurricane twisted.
    They were only up about 60'. I ask if they had been on any tall towers lately. They said they just came from a 2,000' tower South
    of Houston.

  • @jesusischrist1527
    @jesusischrist1527 2 года назад +2

    I did this for 13 years and even though I miss the work life I don't miss the partying life that came with it 😔😔😔... Is that Barry Oliver aka " Uncle Barry " at 7:12 ???

  • @chetmyers7041
    @chetmyers7041 Год назад +2

    Rotating the antenna? Re-directing the radiation pattern? How many degrees was it "clocked"?

  • @johnt6213
    @johnt6213 10 месяцев назад

    Does the tension on the guy wires have to be adjusted on the side opposite the lift?

  • @echoewest2685
    @echoewest2685 2 года назад

    Wow

  • @BoB4jjjjs
    @BoB4jjjjs 2 года назад +3

    I think I would rather do the job than watch you all working up there! Seen that clouds rolling in and thought "Time you weren't there!" It's a job you need nice days for! Good to see it though, it is a job that most couldn't do :-))

    • @abovetheclouds2159
      @abovetheclouds2159  2 года назад +6

      Actually, work was stopped twice due to lightning in the area.
      Summer in Florida - It's gonna rain...

    • @mattjack3983
      @mattjack3983 2 года назад

      @@abovetheclouds2159 yeah i was just thinking thats probably pretty common there in Florida.

    • @nivaldafarias6091
      @nivaldafarias6091 Год назад

      ASRGTYURRGHYTYYTTTYRGREE ASFGHHHGTTYYYTTHHHJUUYYUJ ACGGHFGGGDFGGFFGGEGDFFGGREERT4 4yuy67t6757776

    • @nivaldafarias6091
      @nivaldafarias6091 Год назад

      @@abovetheclouds2159
      ASFHHHJYU 567Y5YU88876

  • @TheSilmarillian
    @TheSilmarillian Год назад

    Talk about trust in the gear you are using eg the high lift crane its not going to fail and if it does you wont even know about it ,professionals in action and a team that doesn't even on an individual 2 team basis look around and see if their fellow team members are there you just know they are, kudos to crane operator also the first link in the chain job well done , enough said ,hello from Australia....@25:59 we have gone 2 far its time to get some bolts in this ......................

  • @ihaligrygg9411
    @ihaligrygg9411 9 месяцев назад

    DANG!!!

  • @dansteel9873
    @dansteel9873 19 дней назад

    On a Harris antenna the multi couple sits below the beacon plate which is a pain in the nads.

  • @michaelcramerichliebemeinl5150
    @michaelcramerichliebemeinl5150 Год назад +2

    is this yellow structure that lifts the men up there permanent? Or was it fixed to the antenna for the ourpose of this job and will later be removed? At 8:25 I can see the beginning of this structure, but I still can`t figure out wether this is a permanent part of the antenna (for maintenence) or not.

    • @billneese5166
      @billneese5166 Год назад +4

      The yellow structure is a gin pole. They are temporary and consist of one or more sections. In this instance, the gin pole is used to secure the antenna in place. General information at wirelessestimator.com/content/industryinfo/317

  • @bellowphone
    @bellowphone 2 года назад +1

    I've used a slugging spanner to take off a nut; never to put one on.

  • @asdf9890
    @asdf9890 Год назад +2

    I have crazy respect for these guys, they are THE Few. Everytime I drive to work, I drive past 3 of these monsters and I often look at the top and think, someone's climbed up there. Insane to me, but to those guys and girls, it's just another day at work.
    Sidenote: 15:48 you can just see the curvature of the Earth! Amazing.
    I always hope to see someone working up there when I drive by. How often do crews go up on antennas?

    • @skeeter197140
      @skeeter197140 Год назад +3

      Easy. Don't want to anger the Flat Earthers. Lol!

  • @MetalGuru965
    @MetalGuru965 2 года назад +7

    Two concerns (1) still seeing lots of corrosion near and at the joint. Thought they said they were removing it? (2) Those bolts have to have a torque spec. Who is measuring it? Banging on a wrench with a hammer doesn't really torque anything.

    • @getredytagetredy
      @getredytagetredy 2 года назад

      Shut up

    • @adraedin
      @adraedin 2 года назад +3

      I was also curious why it appears they aren't measuring torque...just setting it tight and assuming it's right seems a bit sketchy.

    • @MikeDent
      @MikeDent Год назад +2

      There’s only one torque setting for those bolts , TAF

    • @justicekrista5665
      @justicekrista5665 Год назад

      I'm amazed you're not the supervisor, oh I forgot you're in mommy's basement on the computer night and day

    • @richpayton7162
      @richpayton7162 Год назад +1

      @@MikeDent rotflmfao !

  • @notta3d
    @notta3d Год назад

    B*lls of steel is what these guys have. It should be a name your price job. Much respect.

  • @terencelane3081
    @terencelane3081 Год назад +1

    And I get giddy on a thick carpet.

  • @_FROY
    @_FROY 10 месяцев назад

    Paul teutul sr working the cable?

  • @JohnSmith-uy7sv
    @JohnSmith-uy7sv 9 месяцев назад

    It's never the fall that kills you.... it's the sudden stop!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @baracktrump1410
    @baracktrump1410 Год назад +1

    Not enough money on earth to get me up there.

  • @dansteel9873
    @dansteel9873 19 дней назад

    AH you whooped. I miss talking like that.

  • @davewood2640
    @davewood2640 2 года назад

    Life on the end of a fishing pole

  • @chartphred1
    @chartphred1 2 года назад +1

    Prob call it a Gin pole, cos you'd wanna consume an entire bottle of Gin after a day working on one.

  • @dougtaylor7724
    @dougtaylor7724 16 дней назад +1

    The hoist must be rated at 50 tons or so to pick up the tremendous weight of their balls.

  • @getredytagetredy
    @getredytagetredy 2 года назад

    Who borrowed my bullpin at lunchtime?
    @ was an AB pin too...dammit.q

  • @gkiltz0
    @gkiltz0 24 дня назад +1

    I just hope it worked out for the station and put some better OTA signal over the areas where people live and not so much over the Everglades Aligators don't buy much from local advertizers.

  • @philipjones9458
    @philipjones9458 2 дня назад

    Have any of your viewers heard of a U.K steeplejack called Fred Dibnah who used to demolish chimneys by setting them on fire. Ha passed away in 2002, videos are on RUclips well worth watching.

  • @user-cg5io5on8u
    @user-cg5io5on8u 5 месяцев назад

    I been 100 feet on a pole with the old school safety with no fall protection, but that was high enough, I'm good.

  • @johnsonwilliam1023
    @johnsonwilliam1023 8 месяцев назад +1

    My recliner moved and I about pissed myself

  • @LarryPeteet
    @LarryPeteet 10 месяцев назад

    No room for them to carry any fear!

  • @elvisstarlord7121
    @elvisstarlord7121 2 года назад

    This is called meat on the hook.

  • @Boediprasetya
    @Boediprasetya Месяц назад +1

    The direction of the antenna is rotated, this is a mistake at the beginning of the first installation or something else. It would be strange if there was an error in the direction of the antenna and it was corrected later

  • @tubeDude48
    @tubeDude48 Год назад +1

    How many feet up is the antenna?

    • @billneese5166
      @billneese5166 Год назад +1

      Height Above Average Terrain is listed as 1,014 feet, but that includes the antenna and top beacon.

  • @laminak1173
    @laminak1173 10 месяцев назад +1

    Just cant imagine what happens if you drop a bolt or a hammer from the top 😅

  • @dr.kennethnoisewater26
    @dr.kennethnoisewater26 10 месяцев назад

    Sit on it and rotate!

  • @nixxonnor
    @nixxonnor 2 месяца назад

    What was the weight of the part they rotated? This job looked pretty sketchy, but I guess they followed a precise procedure to make it happen :D It was a very well performed teamwork

  • @The_DuMont_Network
    @The_DuMont_Network 6 дней назад

    Was the antenna installed with the wrong orientation? Seems it would have been fixed long before the hardware corroded. Would love to know the reL story.

  • @fredschmidt100
    @fredschmidt100 Год назад +1

    How much does this pay ?

  • @user-oi7rc3ut7e
    @user-oi7rc3ut7e 9 месяцев назад

    i shudder to think if the hellicopter engine failed

  • @harezy
    @harezy 2 года назад +9

    Who put it on backwards in the first place 🤣🤣

    • @andrewcourt5156
      @andrewcourt5156 9 месяцев назад

      It is only backwards in the morning, by the time the afternoon comes, the world has turned enough for it to be facing the right way !