lattice tower - vertaling naar russisch
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lattice tower - vertaling naar russisch

FREESTANDING FRAMEWORK TOWER
Lattice steel pylon; Lattice steel tower; Lattice Tower; Truss tower
  • m}}-long section of the Benguela-Belize Lobito-Tomboco Platform, which accounts for only about half the overall height of the structure
  • The [[Duga radar]] array
  • [[Dragon Tower]], the tallest observation & radio lattice tower in China features a solid core, the most common design for tall lattice towers built in China
  • [[Elbe Crossing 2]] the tallest Electrical pylons in Germany
  • The [[Nowy Tomyśl Wind Turbines]]
  •  [[Wavre Transmitter]] features an unusual design that uses a guyed upper section to hold the transmitter in place
  •  example of a [[Annapolis type]] military-use lattice tower, the US Navy built over 40 of these from 1914 to 1922 and 1936-1938
  • Hyperboloid lattice tower]]
  • [[Chūshi Powerline Crossing]] the tallest Electrical pylons in Japan
  • View of one of the Jiangyin lattice towers, the third tallest set of Electrical pylons in the world
  • [[Pylons of Messina]] formerly connected Europe to Africa, an underwater cable is used today
  •  example of a [[3803 KM]] tower, a very common 4-sided lattice tower design developed in the Soviet Union. About 80 of these were built in nearly every large city from 1956 to 1967
  • Landmark tower]]
  •  [[Sutro Tower]], a well-known San Francisco landmark featuring an uncommon 3-legged design
  • An 800 foot long fixed steel jacket (lattice) oil platform
  • [[400 kV Thames Crossing]] the tallest Electrical pylons in the United Kingdom
  • [[Tokyo Skytree]], the tallest lattice tower in the world since its completion in 2012
  • The [[Tokyo Tower]] was the tallest lattice tower in the world for 16 years, from 1957 to 1973 and remains the tallest 4-sided lattice tower
  • The [[Eiffel Tower]], measuring 1,083 feet from base to tip, is perhaps the most famous example of a lattice tower. It was built in 1889, and was the tallest man-made structure in the world until 1930.
  • example of a typical commercial-use 3-sided lattice tower, thousands of which have been built throughout North America, over a 100 of which are on the list. Many different truss patterns are used but the general design is largely similar
  • The [[WITI TV Tower]] is the tallest lattice tower in the United States and the tallest 3-sided lattice tower in the world
  •  [[Zhuzhou Television Tower]], example of a lattice tower with a solid core, nearly a dozen of which were built in China throughout the 90's

lattice tower         

общая лексика

решетчатая мачта

решетчатая опора

строительное дело

решётчатая башня

lattice tower         
решётчатая башня
lattice steel tower         

нефтегазовая промышленность

металлическая башня решётчатой конструкции

металлический контейнер решётчатой конструкции (для спуска длинных буров в шахту)

Definitie

ЭЙФЕЛЕВА БАШНЯ
стальная башня (высота 300 м, сторона квадрата основания 123 м, весит 9 тыс. т), сооруженная по проекту А. Г. Эйфеля в Париже для Всемирной выставки 1889 как символ достижений техники 19 в. Используется как обзорная и радиотелевизионная башня.

Wikipedia

Lattice tower

A lattice tower or truss tower is a freestanding vertical framework tower. This construction is widely used in transmission towers carrying high voltage electric power lines, in radio masts and towers (a self-radiating tower or as a support for aerials) and in observation towers. Its advantage is good shear strength at a much lower weight than a tower of solid construction would have as well as lower wind resistance. In structural engineering the term lattice tower is used for a freestanding structure, while a lattice mast is a guyed mast supported by guy lines. Lattices of triangular (3-sided) cross-section are most common, particularly in North America. Square (4-sided) lattices are also widely used and are most common in Eurasia. Lattice towers are often designed as either a space frame or a hyperboloid structure.

Before 1940, they were used as radio transmission towers especially for short and medium wave. Occasionally lattice towers consisting of wood were utilized. The tallest wooden lattice tower was at Mühlacker, Germany. It had a height of 190 metres (620 ft) and was built in 1934 and demolished in 1945. Most wood lattice towers were demolished before 1960. In Germany, the last big radio towers consisting of wood were the transmission towers of the Golm transmitter and the transmitter Ismaning. They were demolished in 1979 and 1983 respectively.

The tallest free standing lattice tower is the Tokyo Skytree, with a height of 634 metres (2,080 ft). The Petronius Compliant Tower is the tallest supported lattice tower at 640 metres (2,100 ft), being partially submerged. The city most renowned for lattice towers is Cincinnati, Ohio, which features four towers above 900 feet in height. Tokyo is the only other city in the world that has more than one above that height.

The majority of the tallest steel lattice towers in the world are actually built in water and used as oil platforms. These structures are usually built in large pieces on land, most commonly in Texas or Louisiana, and then moved by barge to their final resting place. Since a large portion of these towers is underwater the official height of such structures is often held in dispute. The steel lattice truss for these structures, known as jackets in the oil industry, are typically far more robust and reinforced than their land-based counterparts, sometimes weighing more than 50,000 tons as is the case for the Bullwinkle and Baldpate platforms, whereas tall (above 1,000 feet) land-based lattice towers range from a high of 10,000 tons as is the case in the Eiffel Tower to as low as a few hundred tons. They are built to a higher standard to support the weight of the oil platforms built on top of them and because of the forces to which they are subjected. As a result, the cost to build these structures can run into the hundreds of millions. These costs are justified due to the resulting oil and gas revenues, whereas land-based towers have a much lower stream of revenue and therefore the capital costs of towers are typically much less.

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