Additional Info
WorldWind WW42 After Typhoon Kompasu
Kompasu brought winds of up to 52.4 m/s, on September 2nd, 2010
Typhoon Kompasu made landfall on the Korean Peninsula early Thursday morning(2nd Sep.), hitting Gyeonggi Province at around 6:30, about six hours earlier than meteorologists had predicted a day earlier. It lashed Korea and our company which was affected by its crucial winds.
Typhoon Kompasu made landfall on the Korean Peninsula early Thursday morning(2nd Sep.), hitting Gyeonggi Province at around 6:30, about six hours earlier than meteorologists had predicted a day earlier. It lashed Korea and our company which was affected by its crucial winds.
Roofs of next companies were flown away, and power(electricity) was out at more than 60,000 homes and factories along South Korea's west coast, official said. Our company loacted in Ind.Complex which is composed along the west coast.
Officially Korean media records its temporary maximum wind speed 52.4m/s when being lashed our company's area.
Attachment photos are about the situation after Typhoon Konpasu. See carefully our attached photos and the below web site's information.
In photos you can see that towers are safe with no any harm. (We should buy a new testing antenna.)
* WorldWind42 : Full-down / WorldWind16HAN : 80% raised up
* Towers are not guyed.
* WorldWind16HAN with Yagi Antenna
* WorldWind42 with Yagi Antenna (714X-x, CREATE Ltd., 54kg, Length 14.2m)
Officially Korean media records its temporary maximum wind speed 52.4m/s when being lashed our company's area.
Attachment photos are about the situation after Typhoon Konpasu. See carefully our attached photos and the below web site's information.
In photos you can see that towers are safe with no any harm. (We should buy a new testing antenna.)
* WorldWind42 : Full-down / WorldWind16HAN : 80% raised up
* Towers are not guyed.
* WorldWind16HAN with Yagi Antenna
* WorldWind42 with Yagi Antenna (714X-x, CREATE Ltd., 54kg, Length 14.2m)
According to News Article about Typhoon Kompasu (◀ click to read more) on Sep. 03, 2010 KST, typhoon Kompasu headed off to the East Sea, which ripped through the Korean peninsula, tearing down trees and knocking over fences along its track through the central part including the capital. It was a sight rarely seen in recent years. Kompasu brought winds of up to 52.4 m/s and ranked fourth in terms of intensity of storms that affected Korea in the last 107 years. You can read more on News.
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