High winds blamed for Texas tall tower collapse, but corossion appears to be the culprit

In Featured News by Wireless Estimator

A rusted guy wire gave way, causing the 998-foot tower to collapse

A rusted guy wire gave way, causing the 998-foot tower to collapse

A 988-foot TV broadcast tower collapsed in Robstown, Texas yesterday morning as a result of a rusted guy wire that detached near its anchor. No tower techs or station personnel were on site when the structure failed.

Any maintenance being performed on the structure where this guy wire provided support would have most likely caused the structure to collapse.

Any maintenance being performed on the structure where this guy wire provided support would have most likely caused the structure to collapse. Mother Nature yesterday may have saved some lives.

A transmitter building was slighting damaged on one corner after the guyed tower fell at approximately 8:30  a.m.

The tower is owned by Scripps Broadcasting and was constructed in 1988. Scripps acquired the tower in May of 2019 from KRIS Communications.

Scripps’ Corpus Christi station KRIS-TV blamed the collapse due to high winds that swept through Texas’ Coastal Bend yesterday.

According to Weather Underground, at the time of the failure the wind speed was only at 25 mph with one gust of 43 mph

It is not known what the wind speed design requirements were when the tower was engineered under EIA 222-D, however, the 1996 TIA/EIA 222-F standard for Neuces County had a wind speed design of 95 mph.

AT 12:37 p.m., KRIS-TV was informing their viewers that windy conditions affected their signal on various cable systems throughout the area and “our engineers are working diligently on the problem and hope to have a resolution soon that will result in the return of our coverage across the area.”

Later in the evening the station announced the tower’s collapse that caused them to lose their over the air signals for KRIS, CW, KDF, Grit and Court TV.

The tower was also used by an electrical utility, law enforcement and other agencies.

The Robstown tower was one of 11 structures singled out by the FCC earlier this year as having lighting issues when Scripps agreed to pay a $1.1 million penalty to settle an FCC investigation into the broadcaster’s malfunctioning TV tower lights used to alert nearby airplanes.