This makes me nervous, because a cornerstone of our argument about setbacks in antenna cases and ordinance negotiations are that towers typically fall within a narrow radius around the base of the tower; a small percentage of their height. These towers most certainly did not do that, but that may be due to the fact that it was a three-tower DA. Not sure.
 
And the towers were "windmill" type, too. Not a design that one would think would collapse near the base and fall laterally.
 
73, Chris W3KD

Christopher D. Imlay
Booth, Freret, Imlay & Tepper. P.C.
14356 Cape May Road
Silver Spring, Maryland 20904-6011
(301) 384-5525 telephone
(301) 384-6384 facsimile
W3KD@ARRL.ORG


-----Original Message-----
From: Gary Johnston KI4LA <ki4la@arrl.org>
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv <arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org>
Sent: Thu, Aug 5, 2010 9:46 pm
Subject: [arrl-odv:19251] Re:

Oh my. Incredible. 

Sent from Gary's iPhone 4.

On Aug 5, 2010, at 7:45 PM, "Jim Weaver K8JE" <K8JE@ARRL.org> wrote:

In case you would like to see several very ugly pictures (from the perspective of anyone involved in radio) go to
From, the station;s call sign and the residence of the Ohio member who sent this to me, I believe the station is located in Wheeling, WV -- Director Bodson's territory.  The winds seemed to have been straight-line, but might as well have been a tornado.
Incidentally, the URL is good, but I had to cut and paste to make it work.  The link appears to be broken.
73,
Jim
 
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040; Tel. 513-459-1661
ARRL, The national organization for AMATEUR RADIO