I know this is an Old thread but I just found one of these towers and it has the specs for up to 110 mph and with no guy wires it’s rated at 28.8 sq ft of windload and with guy wires it’s rated at 40 sq ft of windload.It made me decide that I was putting it up and not another ROHN 25 that I can’t climb and I can do all of my own antenna and tower work.It’s in amazing condition and it’s the answer to my prayers.The antenna’s will be the same height as what I had with the ROHN 25 before the hurricane.Flashback to the past. Forgot all about the old E-Z way towers and their Wonder Posts. If you had the post it would have jogged the memory likly. Only heard of a few people that had them but tbose that did liked them. Just watch those windload specs. Tbey are onlu for 50mph. Most towers give specs for 70 and 80mph. Twenty or thirty mph increase reduces those numbers a lot. Make sure any post you put on it has the fins. That keeps it from cutting thru the soil as it wants to bend over.
Good choice. Everybody seems to think Rohn-25 is the cat's ass but personally I wouldn't own one. They need to be guyed or supported against a building to get any decent height. I despise guy wires. They always get in the way of raising/lowering antennas of any size. They are small and not that great to climb due to that. They do not accept large rotators mounted inside where rotators should be such as the CDE Tailtwister, Yaesu G-2800 or the Orion 2800 without cutting a brace. There is no easy way to install a thrust bearing. Other than that, they are great. The one thing they have in their favour is they are cheap and plentiful. Oh.....and they do not require much of a base since they need to be guyed. I'm not into cheap. I'm not rich either but I believe you get what you pay for. I prefer something that will take a large load without guy wires. I currently have a 64 foot Trylon T-500 Titan. It is 64 feet high, is almost 48 inches across a face at the bottom and 18 inches at the top. It will handle 52 sq.ft. at 70 mph winds with no ice. That drops to 24 sq. ft at 70 mph with one half radial inch of solid ice. I am planning in the spring to convert it to a tilt-over tower. I ran out of time this year.I know this is an Old thread but I just found one of these towers and it has the specs for up to 110 mph and with no guy wires it’s rated at 28.8 sq ft of windload and with guy wires it’s rated at 40 sq ft of windload.It made me decide that I was putting it up and not another ROHN 25 that I can’t climb and I can do all of my own antenna and tower work.It’s in amazing condition and it’s the answer to my prayers.The antenna’s will be the same height as what I had with the ROHN 25 before the hurricane.
Good choice. Everybody seems to think Rohn-25 is the cat's ass but personally I wouldn't own one. They need to be guyed or supported against a building to get any decent height. I despise guy wires. They always get in the way of raising/lowering antennas of any size. They are small and not that great to climb due to that. They do not accept large rotators mounted inside where rotators should be such as the CDE Tailtwister, Yaesu G-2800 or the Orion 2800 without cutting a brace. There is no easy way to install a thrust bearing. Other than that, they are great. The one thing they have in their favour is they are cheap and plentiful. Oh.....and they do not require much of a base since they need to be guyed. I'm not into cheap. I'm not rich either but I believe you get what you pay for. I prefer something that will take a large load without guy wires. I currently have a 64 foot Trylon T-500 Titan. It is 64 feet high, is almost 48 inches across a face at the bottom and 18 inches at the top. It will handle 52 sq.ft. at 70 mph winds with no ice. That drops to 24 sq. ft at 70 mph with one half radial inch of solid ice. I am planning in the spring to convert it to a tilt-over tower. I ran out of time this year.