Special
Publication

Impact on the Tower

Migration may also have a considerable impact on tow-
er structural requirements. You should receive tower
rigidity and wind loading factors before placing the new
equipment on your tower.

Tower Rigidity, Twist and Sway Requirements

EIA/TIA Standard 222E specifies the tower twist and
sway rigidity requirements that manufacturers must
meet or exceed in their tower design. (see Figure 5).
This requirement ensures that the antenna will remain operation-
al (within 10 dB of nominal) during windy conditions.

The EIA/TIA Standard specifies the maximum allowable
tower twist and sway based on the half-power (3 dB)
beamwidth of the antenna. The narrower the half-power
beamwidth, the more restrictive the tower twist and
sway requirements.

Figure 6 displays the EIA/TIA Standard 222E maximum
allowable tower twist and sway requirements for an 8
foot diameter antenna operating in the 2-GHz, 6.5-GHz
and 10.5 GHz Operational Fixed, private microwave
bands. As the frequency is increased from 2 GHz to 6.5
GHz, the maximum allowable tower twist and sway
decreases from 3.5° to 1.0‚. The change requires an
increase in tower rigidity by the substantial factor of
3.5. If your tower was originally designed to satisfy the
rigidity specifications for a 2-GHz system, migration to
the 6.5 GHz band may require tower stiffening to satis-
fy the increased twist and sway requirements.


Figure 5 - Tower an Antenna Twist and Sway

Figure 6 - Tower Rigidity Twist and Sway Limits - EIA/TIA-222-E, 8-ft Diameter
Antenna
Type
Frequency
MHz
3 dB Beamwidth
Degrees
Maximum Allowable
Twist and Sway Degrees
PL8-18A1850-1990 4.53.5
PL8-65D6425-7125 1.31.0
PL8-10510500-10700 0.90.7

Andrew Corporation
10500 W. 153rd Street Orland Park, IL U.S.A. 60462

PR-20-01 12 March 1993

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