As a tower owner, the safety of those climbing your tower is a top priority. That’s why choosing a fall protection system that provides increased safety is crucial to the success of your tower’s safety.
One of our most innovative solutions – the Split Nut – was conceptualized on a napkin on a snowy jobsite. It just goes to show our team is dedicated to finding a solution to your problem.
Let’s face it, the current system of adding an anchor bolt to an existing base plate is flawed. Too often the process can take long to complete. See how to fix it.
As the race to 5G continues, everyone seems to understand the benefits of 5G and its potential to change the way we interact with the world. From telemedicine to more efficient and faster-moving cities, the benefits of 5G are simply amazing, but how will all of this come to fruition?
For many years, the tower industry has been tasked with the challenge of installing and removing loose bolts, straps and buckets at heights – when reached – are found damaged or missing, leaving the concealment panels susceptible to blowing open or even coming off the pole.Â
AF35LVE is a two-component, low viscosity epoxy designed for deep embedment of anchor rods in large diameter holes due to its zero shrinkage and longer working times. AF35LVE has a thixotropic gel-like consistency, and it flows when under pressure and gels once injection stops.
No matter where you look, epoxy – or chemical anchoring – may have been in the forefront of that job’s success. From updating historical buildings in New York to providing a strong base for towers in Kansas, epoxy has been used in a multitude of applications.
Connected by fiber cables and attached to a pole – existing infrastructure, utility poles or streetlights – small cell poles are small low-powered antennas that built in a network combine to provide coverage to surrounding areas.
Some tower owners can struggle to mask the environment because steel towers do not always fit seamlessly into a park with pine trees – enter concealment.
Most threaded fasteners can have their thread either cut or rolled. Each method has their own advantages as well as disadvantages, along with a combination of differences and misconception.Â