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Switzerland. It has a cabin at a height of 150 m (490 ft), containing a coil for feeding the pinnacle, which is insulated against the rest of the tower, separately with high frequency power. Originally the tower was used as a dipole antenna, fed from the cabin.
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The Beromünster transmitter was shut down at midnight (CET) on 28 December 2008, despite some protests against the measure. The 1931 backup tower was dismantled in 2011; the
Blosenberg tower itself was declared a heritage monument and may become part of an on-site museum.
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near Basel as a television transmission tower – a T-antenna for medium wave until 1962. After this date it was transformed into a tower radiator, serving as a backup transmitter for the
Blosenbergturm itself.
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on the
Blosenbergturm have a special feature: at dawn a rotating beamer above the cabin comes into service. This beamer, which is much less bright than the beamers on the
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There was another, 126 m (413 ft) tall, freestanding lattice tower nearby, dismantled in 2011, which, like the
Blosenbergturm, was a
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74:. With a total height of 217 metres (712 ft) it is currently the
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233:20th-century architecture in Switzerland
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133:Beromünster Reserve Transmission Tower
144:technical data about the transmitter
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161:List of famous transmission sites
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20:The Blosenbergturm at Beromünster
223:Radio masts and towers in Europe
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218:Former radio masts and towers
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213:Towers completed in 1937
66:The Blosenbergturm is a
30:radio transmission tower
96:aircraft warning lights
76:sixth tallest structure
184:47.189556°N 8.175417°E
129:on SkyscraperPage.com.
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228:Towers in Switzerland
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68:self-radiating tower
189:47.189556; 8.175417
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100:Stuttgart TV Tower
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49:Canton of Lucerne
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61:medium-wave
53:Switzerland
45:Beromünster
202:Categories
138:Structurae
121:Structurae
57:frequency
150:See also
39:station
72:antenna
47:in the
63:band.
37:radio
94:The
24:The
135:at
118:at
43:at
41:DRS
204::
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