The purpose of guy wire anchors is to counteract lateral forces on utility poles and towers induced by wind loads and lateral loads. These anchors usually consist of helical anchors screwed in the ground by hydraulic means.
The tap root is the main anchor root, that is its purpose.
Assuming that the Anchor base and the antenna base are at the same elevation, then you can solve for a simple right triangle. a^2 + b^2 =c^2 Solving this gives 100.5 feet... plus whatever is required for the end wraps and cable clamping.
This is what the purpose of a switch is. It connects the "hot" wire to the load. When this is done the load becomes energized.
The FCC was created "for the purpose of the national defense" and "for the purpose of promoting safety of life and property through the use of wire and radio communications."
By "third wire" I believe you are speaking of the ground wire. Its only purpose is to ensure that the over-current device, which is the breaker or fuse, operates property when a fault exists in the circuit. Without the ground wire you increase your risk of injury, death, or property damage. It is there for your protection. Do not remove it. Always choose to use it when it exists.
243
weigh down the anchor
weig down the down the anchor
The tap root is the main anchor root, that is its purpose.
To anchor the plant firmly into the ground.
To anchor the plant and to absorb water
False
anchor handling winch and winch wire is designed based on bollard pull requirement. winch wire breaking strength is 2 to 2.5 times of bollard pull force. anchor winch brake holding is 1.5 time of bollard pull or 80% of wire breaking strength
it is the brown wire in a three pin plug
An anchor with roses mean that on a guy/girl, their partner is what keeps them stable and strong. If they have a regular anchor usually it's just To remind themselves to stay strong and stable. The anchor is really something you decide the meaning of though.
The purpose of a root of a plant is to not only absorb water and nutrients for the plant but also to anchor the plant in soil.
It's pronounced 'GUY-yo.' That's guy, as in, "What a guy!" or "guy wire."