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The metal is less than a month old, i frequent that area and just noticed it yesterday, also thanks for cleaning up my extra files teegateIs the metal new?
yes your are right on the location. It's a shame it had a nice newer bridge till mother nature decided to take it away. since then the re-route really changed a lot the scenic part of the trailIs this the Mullica River Trail (yellow blazed) in Wharton State Forest, where the trail used to cross the waterway known as either Mechescatauxin Creek or Sleeper Branch, after it leaves Toms Pond Trail? It sure looks like it, although I think your picture was taken from the northeast side, which is the closed-off part of the trail.
I'm guessing those are supports for a steel-cable footbridge. I don't know the correct term for it, but I've seen other bridges like it.
May be and admit it's similar to your picture. Wouldn't the anchor be parallel with the cable instead of what appears perpendicular? Then there's that freestanding post opposite. I guess time will show.It.s a Helical Anchor
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I used to work on and inspect the installations of aircraft arresting machinery and steam catapults. For land based arresting systems, if I recall correctly, in order to secure the arresting machinery on the side of the airfield, they used explosive actuated anchors. The anchor tube would be set into the ground and a small charge at the bottom would blow the purposely weakened tube into a group of tangs that would hold that anchor tight. Think of opening an inverted metal umbrella in the ground, then trying to pull that out of the ground. We called them Harvey anchors after the company that held the patent.
Bob that's unreal! I worked for a company many years ago and we rebuilt the steam catapults on just about every carrier that came into the navy yard for refurb! I was probably 20 or so! I have never heard anyone else in my life mention a steam catapult let alone say they've worked on them!!