Do you need obstruction lighting on your antenna tower?

If you’re serious about antennas, you might be considering a tower in your backyard. Antenna towers make it possible to put your antenna high above roofs and trees. Remember up to 90% of your signal can be blocked by common objects like houses. So, a tower is a great way to make sure that you’re getting the best possible signal.

Towers are more common in rural areas of course, where people have plenty of room to put one up. An average person probably doesn’t need to put a tower much higher than 50 feet. However, there are cases where you need to go higher than that.

You might even need to go so high that you need to think about obstruction lights. An obstruction light is the light that goes at the top of your tower. You’ve probably seen them on tall buildings and antenna towers as you drive by at night.

Why an obstruction light is needed​


Obstruction lights are placed on tall objects so that low-flying planes can see them at night. You may not think that you’re in any sort of flight path, but it doesn’t matter; obstruction lights are required on every tall thing. It’s not just a tower or a building. In some cases obstruction lights are required on power lines, monuments, basically anything tall that stands by itself.

How high does your tower need to be before it needs an obstruction light?​


The FAA rules are clear. Any object that rises to 200 feet above ground level needs an obstruction light.

There are different requirements for different lights, too. Here’s some information lifted from the FAA:

FAA DesignationColorDescription
L-810Steady-Burning – REDSingle Obstruction Light
L-810Steady-Burning – REDDouble Obstruction Light
L-856High-Intensity Flashing – WHITEObstruction Light (40 FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-857High-Intensity Flashing – WHITECatenary Light (60 FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-864Medium-Intensity Flashing – REDObstruction Light (20-40 FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-865Medium-Intensity Flashing – WHITEObstruction Light (40-FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-864/L-865Medium-Intensity Flashing Dual – RED / WHITEObstruction Light (20-40 FLASHES PER MINUTE) Obstruction Light (40 FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-866Medium-Intensity Flashing – WHITECatenary Light (60-FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-885Low-Intensity Flashing – REDRed Catenary Light (60 FLASHES PER MINUTE)
L-866/L-885Medium-Intensity Flashing Dual – RED / WHITECatenary Light (60 FLASHES PER MINUTE)

Of course, consult with them about the specifics of what you may need for your situation, but this table can give you some idea.

Where can you get obstruction lights for towers?​


Why, at Solid Signal of course. Our collection of obstruction lights will help you make sure you’re right with the law and that you’re keeping everything safe. After all it’s not just about making sure the planes stay undamaged. Anything that hits your expensive tower will knock it down. This means the tower will probably be destroyed. The antennas on it will be too, and whatever it falls on is probably toast. Using proper obstruction lights is a smart idea for everyone.

If you need help choosing an obstruction light or anything for your tower set up, do yourself a favor and call Solid Signal at 888-233-7563. Our experts can help you with a custom tower quote that includes obstruction lights, towers, guy wires, safety equipment, and everything you’ll need to get that antenna where you want it to be.


The post Do you need obstruction lighting on your antenna tower? appeared first on The Solid Signal Blog.

Continue reading...
 

Is the USB port on a Gemini good for anything?

What to do if you lose local TV channels in your RV

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 0, Members: 0, Guests: 0)