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Blaw-Knox tower


The Blaw-Knox company was a manufacturer of steel structures and construction equipment based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The company is today best known for its radio towers, most of which were constructed during the 1930s in the United States. Although Blaw-Knox built many kinds of towers, the term Blaw-Knox tower (or radiator) usually refers to the company's unusual "diamond cantilever" design, which is stabilized by guy wires attached only at the vertical center of the mast, where its cross-section is widest. A 1942 advertisement claims that 70% of all radio towers in the US at the time were built by Blaw-Knox.

The distinctive diamond-shaped towers became an icon of early radio. Several are listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the diamond antenna design has been incorporated into logos of various organizations related to radio, for example the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.

The diamond-shaped tower was patented by Nicholas Gerten and Ralph Jenner for Blaw-Knox July 29, 1930. and was one of the first mast radiators. Previous antennas for medium and long wave broadcasting usually consisted of wires strung between masts, but in the Blaw-Knox antenna, as in modern AM broadcasting mast radiators, the metal mast structure itself functioned as the antenna. To prevent the high frequency potential on the mast from short-circuiting to ground, the narrow lower end of the tower rested on a ceramic insulator about 3 feet wide, shaped like a ball and socket joint. Thus the tower required guy lines to hold it upright.

The distinguishing feature of the Blaw-Knox tower was its wide diamond (or rhomboidal) shape, which served to make it rigid, to resist shear stresses. One advantage of this was to reduce the number of guy wires needed. Blaw-Knox masts required only one set of 3 or 4 guy cables, attached at the tower's wide "waist". In contrast, narrow masts require 2 to 4 sets of guy cables, attached at different heights, to prevent the tower from buckling. The advantage of fewer guy cables was to simplify the electrical design of the antenna, because conductive guy cables interfered with its radiation pattern. If not insulated at their bottom end, guy wires acted as additional "antennas" and conducted the power radiated by the antenna to ground, wasting power. Even when insulated from ground, the sections of guy cable could act as "parasitic" resonant elements, reradiating the radio waves in other directions and thus altering the antenna's radiation pattern. In some Blaw-Knox mast designs (see WBT towers, right) the upper pyramidal section was made longer than the lower, to keep the attachment point of the guys as low as possible, to minimize their interference.


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