30107 KM
30107 KM is the designation of Russian-built guyed tubular masts for FM-/TV-broadcasting, which were built in the first half of the 1960s at different places in Russia and Ukraine. The 30107 KM-mast has normally a 151 or 182.5 metres high mast body with a wall diameter of 16 – 10 mm, and exists in versions guyed in three and four directions.
Its most unusual feature however, which gives it its characteristic look are the crossbars equipped with a gangway with railing, which run in two levels from the mast structure to each outmost guy. These crossbars are used for oscillation damping of the structure and are used for the installation of antennas.
In the former Soviet Union, guyed tubular masts for broadcasting without these crossbars were also built. However such masts are not something special as such structures also exist in Germany, Czech, Slovakia, France, the United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea, Austria, Sweden, Slovenia and Poland.
30107 KM-masts with crossbars
City | Country | Year built | Height | Number of crossbar levels | Number of crossbars | Coordinates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Vinnytsia | Ukraine | 1961 | 1161 ft | 354 m | 2 | 3 | 49°14′30.04″N 28°25′25.25″E |
Orenburg | Russia | 1961 | 656 ft | 200 m | 2 | 3 | 51°46′18.09″N 55°06′58.06″E |
Kryvyi Rih | Ukraine | 1960 | 607 ft | 198 m | 2 | 3 | 47°54′42.42″N 33°25′5.91″E |
Vladikavkaz | Russia | 1961 | 650 ft | 198 m | 2 | 3 | 43°00′55.99″N 44°41′10.47″E |
Barnaul | Russia | 1962 | 648 ft | 197,5 m | 2 | 3 | 53°18′8.48″N 83°46′4.7″E |
Pervomaysk | Ukraine | ? | 643 ft | 196 m | 2 | 3 | 48°04′01.24″N 30°51′29.36″E |
Izhevsk | Russia | 1962 | 640 ft | 195 m | 2 | 3 | 56°52′19.05″N 53°09′50.05″E |
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk | Russia | 1963 | 597 ft | 182 m | 2 | 4 | 46°56′59.47″N 142°45′1.53″E |
Saransk | Russia | 1961 | 591 ft | 180 m | 2 | 4 | 54°11′11.98″N 45°08′49.32″E |
Biysk | Russia | 1965 | 591 ft | 180 m | 2 | 4 | 52°32′53.76″N 85°11′45.64″E |
Arkhangelsk | Russia | 1964 | 495 ft | 151 m | 2 | 3 | 64°32′47.16″N 40°30′55.83″E |
Kaliningrad | Russia | 1962 | 495 ft | 151 m | 2 | 3 | 54°43′41.81″N 20°29′39.86″E |
Veselovka | Russia | 1965 | 495 ft | 151 m | 2 | 3 | 54°35′32.35″N 22°00′47.02″E |