Originally posted by: Nohr
Christmas lights.
Originally posted by: giantpinkbunnyhead
That looks like some sort of tower with somethin wrapped around it... I've never seen that before. Is that common in your area?
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: giantpinkbunnyhead
That looks like some sort of tower with somethin wrapped around it... I've never seen that before. Is that common in your area?
I've seen them a number of times - they're not very common, but they seem to be on large industrial chimneys (usually for incinerators or power plants).
I just happened to come across the picture (linked above) and I relised I didn't know what they were.
My first thought was that it was some kind of rain deflector - but that would be pointless.
Originally posted by: MichaelD
Originally posted by: Nohr
Christmas lights.
FTW!
Never seen those before either. The "for strength" suggestion sounds feasible enough, but I've seen taller chimneys w/o those wrapped around them. So...![]()
Originally posted by: Savij
So I looked it up. I was wrong. The helical "strakes" are there to reduce vortex shedding...less turbulance from wind.
Originally posted by: Savij
So I looked it up. I was wrong. The helical "strakes" are there to reduce vortex shedding...less turbulance from wind.
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
I think in that picture it's a stairway so people can go up and inspect the chimney and take samples of the gas coming out of it.
Originally posted by: 5to1baby1in5
When air blows past a stack like this, there are vorticies which are shed around it (picture a flag flapping in high wind). If the frequencies of the vorticies match the natural resonate frequency of the stack, then the wind can destroy it.
They usually just build the stack strong enough for the wind load.