Silliman: On Top, Still Climbing
by Steve Jess
CHANDLER, Ind. Lots of people can say theyve been
to the top of the Empire State Building, but not many have been
where Tom Silliman has been, clinging to a metal framework and looking
down at the art-deco peak, once intended as a dirigible mooring
mast, that now anchors a cluster of FM and TV antennas for New York
City.
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Tom Silliman Facts
Born: March 15, 1945
Personal: Divorced, two daughters, 23 and 26 years
old.
Located: Newburgh, Ind.
Education: Bachelors and Masters degrees
in Electrical Engineering, Cornell University, 1969 and 1970,
respectively.
Professional: Registered as a professional engineer
in Indiana, Minnesota and Maryland.
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Even though the 56-year-old Silliman is CEO and majority stockholder
of Electronics Research Inc., a manufacturer of towers, FM antennas,
and combiners, he still climbs towers on the job against
the advice of some of his friends.
In recent months, his work has put him where few in the radio
supply business go: on national television and into the pages of
the New York Times.
"I have no intention of quitting climbing," Silliman
said emphatically. While he cannot go out drinking the night before
a climb, as he says he did in his 20s, he believes he remains
fit because he has adapted his life to the needs of his work as
he ages.
Spartan life
"In my 30s, I started a weight-training program. Ill
go to the gym tonight and Ill run about five miles. Itll
take me about 45 minutes. My pulse rate will go to about 132. I
live a very Spartan life."
Electronics Research Inc. was established in Evansville, Ind.
in 1943 to perfect the radio systems used in World War II aircraft.
The middle-America location was no accident. The city was out
of reach of enemy aircraft, and the Ohio River was too shallow for
submarines.
Sillimans father, Robert Silliman, worked at the Radio Research
Laboratory in Boston, and flew to Evansville several times during
the war to test radio gear at ERI.
Robert Silliman died in February of this year at age 87.
After the war, the elder Silliman conducted research and development
as a consultant for ERI. When ERIs owner died in the late
1950s and the company began to falter, one of its major clients,
Collins Radio Co., hired Robert Silliman to study why antennas it
bought from ERI were not performing up to par.
Silliman concluded that the late owners widow and her accountant
lacked the expertise to manage the technical enterprise. Not long
after, ERI collapsed financially, although it did not declare bankruptcy.
The entire staff was laid off. Collins asked Silliman to take over
ERI, which he did in partnership with Chester Newcomb, an ERI field
technician from its beginnings in the war. Together they bought
the companys assets and reorganized it.
Under Newcomb and Robert Silliman, the company flourished, according
to his son Tom, developing the Vertical 300 dipole and several circular
polarized antennas in the 1960s.
Tom Silliman joined the firm after receiving his Bachelors
degree in Electrical Engineering from Cornell University in 1969.
"Chester and I would go out and I started doing the field
service and then Chester would climb for me and thats about
all he did," Silliman said. He took a leave of absence for
one term in 1970 to finish his Masters degree in Electrical
Engineering degree at Cornell.
With that degree in hand, he came back to serve as project engineer
for ERIs build-out of an antenna on top of One Shell Plaza
in Houston.
"That was a 12-layer, three (-sided) FM panel antenna that
had first- and second-null fill and beam tilt," Silliman said
with evident pride.
"It was quite a design. It eventually had eight stations
operating at 100 kilowatts ERP from it." Silliman said, at
that time, it was the highest-power FM system in the country.
Filter redesign
Many other projects followed through the 1970s, until ERI stopped
taking new work for a year in the early 80s to concentrate
on redesigning its filters. The new designs paid off in better performance
and in new jobs, such as that on Bostons Prudential Building,
according to Silliman.
In 1992, Silliman led the team that installed new antennas atop
the Empire State Building. While not ERIs largest antenna
complex, Silliman says it was the companys most extensive
job, involving the design and installation of not just antennas
but also transmitter rooms, cable chases and an access alarm system.
During this 18-month job, he and his team replaced antennas further
down the structure that exceeded radiation standards for people
on the top floors of the building.
"That is probably the most incredible thing I have ever been
involved in." Silliman said. "Im not going to say
its the most incredible thing Ive ever done,
because I didnt really do it (alone). I did it as part of
a team, an incredible team of manufacturing and business management
and engineering."
Its hard to look at a photograph of Silliman clinging to
a mast 1,500 feet above street level without thinking of the risk
involved.
His high-altitude climbing has attracted the attention of national
media. In April, ABCs "20/20" profiled him as one
of its "People Working on the Edge." The New York Times
covered one of his trips to the top of the Empire State Building
in January under the title, "Where Is King Kong When a Bulb
Goes Out?"
Silliman says hell also be featured in an upcoming segment
of the "Ripleys Believe or Not" program.
Silliman insists the national exposure doesnt faze him.
"Lots of times people who live ordinary lives think that
anybody who works in broadcasting is unique," he said. Silliman,
who once climbed towers wearing a leather linemans belt and
simple clips that could "roll out" and detach from the
line, now boasts that his company uses only state-of-the-art climbing
gear.
Engineers ride only steel cables, wearing synthetic belts that
include shoulder and leg straps to hold a climber if he becomes
inverted. New "ascenders" allow a climber to go up the
line, but lock and hold the climber in place should he lose his
grip.
ERI has never lost a tower climber on the job, said Silliman.
He and his staff will get plenty of opportunities to climb in
the next few years, with the advent of digital television and the
promise of in-band, on-channel digital audio broadcasting. ERIs
FM antennas feature a wide bandwidth good news for stations
that are forced to take down their current antennas to make room
on a tower for a new digital TV system.
Side-mounted rototiller
"Because our side-mount product is so broad, weve managed
to put two and three stations regularly into a side-mounted rototiller,
and keep stations located at the same site." Silliman said.
"All of a sudden, two antennas and feed lines go down, and
two DTVs go up, and everybodys happy."
In some ways, co-locating stations has been made easier by the
consolidation of the radio industry. FM stations that are forced
to use the same antenna now often are owned by the same company,
eliminating the politics between competitors that Silliman saw in
previous years.
ERIs engineers are preparing for the IBOC era, designing
combiners to merge the outputs of digital and analog transmitters
onto a single transmission line. ERI also is mulling over designs
for dual-input antennas that do the combining right on the tower.
"If you do that, you can eliminate a lot of that loss (from
the combiner)," Silliman said. "But then you have to provide
an extra feed line on the tower, and now we have weight and wind
load and installation cost, and so on. Its really going to
be a question of where you spend the money: whether you spend it
on lost energy or whether you spend it on new hardware."
When asked about another potential future antenna technology,
the Crossed-Field and EH Antennas, Silliman said he does not believe
the claims that thesecompact AM antenna designs can match the performance
of a traditional tower.
Silliman studied the theory behind the CFA and EH antenna two
years ago, and participated in a panel on these antennas at the
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers last year. He observed
as the CFA and EH proponents delivered a paper supporting their
concept at NAB2000.
What does Silliman think of their claims? "Total snake oil,"
"bunk," and "a marvelous scam" are the more
polite terms he uses.
"I went about it using the electromagnetic field analysis
with Maxwells fundamental five equations. I re-read all my
texts on that, and as I applied it, I realized that the whole argument
in the (CFA) patent was totally false. I couldnt believe this
crap."
Most of ERIs business is comprised of selling and installing
new systems. The division that evaluates existing structures accounts
for roughly 10 percent of ERIs income, he said.
ERI has had some overseas sales, such as in India, Europe and
the Caribbean, but U.S. sales make up the bulk of the companys
work, he said.
Silliman doesnt mince words about the future of ERI. Despite
occasional rumors to the contrary, he said the company is not for
sale. He owns 60 percent of the stock, and he intends to keep it.
Since the other 40 percent belongs to ERIs 150 employees through
their retirement plan, selling the firm would be complicated.
"We actually did a very thorough study of what it require
to sell our company last year, and we were advised that we shouldnt
be looking to sell right now. Our employees arent really interested
in selling at the moment, nor are we in negotiations with anyone
for acquisition," Silliman said.
Besides, if he sold the company, he might have to hang up his
linemans belt for good.
"I have a very strange job. As a CEO of a company, I live
a very unusual life. If I worked for anybody else I doubt if theyd
let me do what I want to do, even though I think Im pretty
good at what I do.
"What I do does expose me to some danger, and I know a lot
of people in chat rooms in the last year have mentioned my name
and said that I shouldnt do some of the things that I do.
But I like to do them, and Im good at that."
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