ARRL -- The national association for Amateur Radio ARRL -- The national association for Amateur Radio
Holiday -- Ad
Find on this site...
Site Index 
  
Search site:
  
Call sign search:
 
ARRL Member Login...
Username:   Password:

  
Register    Forgot userid/password? 
Quick Links...
Text-only 
Current Feature Articles

  •  
  • Nov 06 Surfin': Homebrewing Today
  •  
  • Nov 05 DX the Hard Way
  •  
  • Nov 02 ARRL In Action: What Have We Been Up to Lately?
  •  
  • Nov 01 It Seems to Us: It Doesn't Just Happen
  •  
  • Oct 30 Surfin': Mapping Up
  •  
  • Oct 27 Amateur Radio Quiz: Assault'n Batteries
  •  
  • Oct 23 Surfin': Remembering the Woodpecker
  •  
  • Oct 22 The Amateur Amateur: A Soggy, Foggy, Doggy Demo in the Park
  •  
  • Oct 17 Youth@HamRadio.Fun: A Scouting Marathon
  •  
  • Oct 16 Pizza, Macaroni and a Cheeseburger

    ARRL Products:
    Digital Communications

    (More)

    Nifty E-Z Guide to D-STAR Operation -- Now Shipping! -- The first comprehensive reference to the world of D-STAR operation!

    VoIP: Internet Linking for Radio Amateurs -- Now Shipping! -- Your complete guide to the most widely-used VoIP systems used by hams: EchoLink ,IRLP, eQSO and WIRES-II.

    ARRL's VHF Digital Handbook -- Dive into the digital radio universe!

    ARRL's HF Digital Handbook -- Join the Digital Race! 4th Edition.

    Digital Signal Processing Technology -- Essentials of the Communications Revolution. An understandable presentation and reference on DSP in contemporary communications technology.

       

    Surfin': Down on the Antenna Farm

    By Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU
    Contributing Editor
    August 26, 2005


    Tours of broadcast radio station antenna farms are available at the four Web sites we surf to this week.


    Last week's installment of Surfin', "Simply Antennas," visited a Web site dedicated to helping radio amateurs and radio enthusiasts with their antenna projects. This week, we go to the opposite end of the antenna spectrum and check out Web sites that visit commercial broadcast radio (AM, FM, and TV) antenna tower sites.

    Fybush.com is a wonderful Web site to explore. It is full of tidbits of information regarding broadcast radio towers and tower sites, as well as broadcast radio history. In addition to reading stories about the towers, you can view pictures, too. The Web site includes towers in 31 US states, four Canadian provinces, Mexico, England, France, and American Samoa. Scott Fybush, the brains behind the operation, actually travels to radio tower sites to document them for this Web site.

    Growing up in the shadow of the antenna farm of the local AM radio "powerhouse," I always enjoy reading about broadcast station antenna farms (the RF is in my blood). When I visited Fybush.com to check it out for this column, I got hooked reading about various antenna farms featured in the Web site's "Tower Site of the Week."

    Fybush.com documents AM, FM, and TV broadcast station antenna farms throughout North America and beyond.

    There is a "Tower Site of the Week" index and naturally, I checked it out to read about the local antenna sites in Connecticut that I am familiar with. Next, I read about out-of-state antenna sites that I have visited, like Mount Washington, NH, and the Empire State Building in "the City." The Empire State Building story led me to the Alpine, NJ, Armstrong Tower story and that led me to the tragic World Trade Towers story.

    Hours passed and one thing led to another including other tower Web sites, like the NECRAT Tower & Antenna Photography site of Mike Fitzpatrick, KB1HWH, where, lo and behold, I found pictures of those towers that were practically in my front yard when I was a kid. By the way, NECRAT is the acronym for North East Commercial Radio Antennas and Towers.

    I also revisited the Radio and Broadcast Technology Page of Jim Hawkins, WA2WHV, which tours "shortwave and standard broadcast transmitter facilities" throughout the USA. Surfin' visited this site years ago and it is just as interesting today as when I first wrote about here way back in November 2001. I also must mention Michigan Broadcast Towers of Tom and Sheila Bosscher, K8TB and W8IIE, which provides a visual tour of towers in the Wolverine State.

    (Thank you, Chuck Milhorn, N4ZDG, for suggesting Fybush.com.)

    Until next week, keep on surfin'.

    Editor' note: Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU, never met an antenna farm he did not like! Write to Stan about antennas, towers, and farms at wa1lou@arrl.net.

       



    Page last modified: 08:36 AM, 26 Aug 2005 ET
    Page author: awextra@arrl.org
    Copyright © 2005, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.