ROHN
Made in the USA!
Used for Off-Air TV Antenna, Amateur (Ham) Radio, Wireless Internet Antenna, MMDS and Cell Phone Signal Booster Installations (not included). All Telescoping push-up Masts are galvanized and come with hardware designed to support light duty antennas in various applications. The unique ROHN design features interior tube flanging combined with a double crimped exterior tube to produce a stronger and more stable joint than most common mast. Each section extends deeper into the lower tubes than most designs, adding to the masts stability. Height describes the overall pipe length. Due to overlapping, extended masts will be shorter. This Mast extends to 43 Feet in actual height that ships to Commercial and Residential addresses alike.
Manufacturers recommend that masts heights of 10 feet and higher above the uppermost bracket be guyed for Addition Wind Load Support. Bonding/Grounding should be made by affixment to Mast. Consult NEC and Applicable Local Code for further guidance
(Antenna, Down Guys and Mounts not included).
43 ft extended Height
Mast Section Dimensions are:
(1) 10'0" length x 1.25" O.D. (16 AWG)
(2) 9'10" length x 1.50" O.D. (18 AWG)
(3) 9'04" length x 1.75" O.D. (18 AWG)
(4) 8'10" length x 2.00" O.D. (18 AWG)
(5) 8'04" length x 2.25" O.D. (18 AWG)
This Item Ships LTL Freight ONLY.
Telescopic and Antenna Mast Wall Brackets 24 inch Standoff Y Style for 1.25 to 3.00 inch OD Mast
- $34.75
Telescopic and Antenna Mast Wall Bracket 30 inch Standoff Y Style for 1.25 to 3.00 inch OD Mast
- $24.95
Having a nice and tidy server room (or closet in most cases) with a properly organized cable system is imperative to rapid deployment and trouble-shooting what should be simple network solutions. Re-organizing tangled network cables is simply an invetment that pays off when you need to figure it out fast. It also makes you appear more professional in front of your bosses, clients and fellow Know-it-all's that don't. Most server rooms I´ve seen (in small to medium businesses) are a usually built with little or no regard for cable management. Here's some simple things to organize and keep your patch panel looking professional and organized.
1- Make a connectivity map. Put down (on paper) the location of all devices running in your environment and assign them a number.
2- Use these numbers to tag each device and their location on your patch panel.
3- Disconnect all network cables going from the patch panel to the switches and re-plug them in an orderly manner. If you can get your hands on colored cables, use a color scheme to categorize devices (I.E. Servers could use red cables, printers yellow ones and workstations could use traditional blue ones).