http://www.flickr.com/photos/smithsonian/4011409604/in/photostream/
One of Elko Nevada's claims to fame in the airmail system:


Littlecub wrote:So what is the antenna-looking-thingey above and behind the hangar??
Inquiring minds want to know.....
lc





Straydog wrote:Here are three more for sure and one maybe.
Meacham, Or. 45 29.6434 , -118 24.1111
Locomotive Springs, Ut 41 42.4969, -112 55.1850
Buffalo Valley, Nv 40 20.7205, -117 20.8610
Promontory Point, Ut (maybe) 41 12.7445, -112 25.7576
Is there a way for others to update the google map or only through your login?
SD
svanarts wrote:God bless these folks near Cottage Grove, MN. They built their farmhouse around the arrow! You can eve see it on the Google street view.
44 49 08.03702, -092 54 42.46795
Apparently Montana still maintains the airway beacons.

tcj wrote:I stumbled across one. There's a fire going NE of Ellensburg (Clockum Tarps fire) and I was looking at a map of the area and noticed an "Airway Beacon" label. I zoomed in to the location in Google earth and found the old foundation right next to "Beacon Road".
https://maps.google.com/maps?q=47+6+14. ... s&t=h&z=15
svanarts wrote:
I have a buddy who is a contract engineer for several broadcast radio stations. I showed him that picture of the aerial array behind that hangar photo from the Smithsonian web site. He says it was a communications antenna. Here's what he said:
" That's a top loaded vertical, most likely for MW of LW. The vertical drop is the antenna lead, the wires between the towers are just top loading, or a capacity hat to help lower the resonant freq. What you see is actually half the antenna. The other half is radials below the ground surface, or the metal buildings below the feedpoint. The "Inverted L" and the "Marconi T" are basically the same.
It's for communications, or broadcast. Most likely for communications. If it was 1920 as you suggest, then almost certainly was a spark transmitter/receiver setup."
So I looked up spark gap transmitter and that seems the most feasible to me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spark-gap_transmitter
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