Suomen leijona

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Suomen leijona marker light and radio beacon (RACON)
File:FLejon.jpg
The modern marker light / radio beacon
Suomen leijona is located in Finland
Suomen leijona
Location Baltic Sea
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Year first constructed 2005
Foundation concrete
Construction steel, fitted with a light, radar reflector and radio beacon powered by a wind generator
Tower shape columnar
Markings / pattern White tower, orange band[1]
Height 13 m (43 ft)[1]
Range 9 nmi (17 km; 10 mi) light, 12 nmi (22 km; 14 mi) RACON[1]
Characteristic White flashing light in groups of 2 with a period of 12 seconds, RACON T(-) period 30 seconds [1]
Admiralty number C4487[1]
NGA number 16098[1]

Suomen leijona (Swedish: Finlands lejon), The Lion of Finland, is a marker light and radio beacon in the Northern Baltic Sea operated by the Finnish Maritime Administration, located approximately 46 km (25 nmi; 29 mi) Southwest of the island of Utö, six kilometers outside the Finnish territorial waters but inside the country's exclusive economic zone.[1]

Suomen leijona lighthouse

The original Suomen leijona (Swedish: Finlands lejon), The Lion of Finland, was a caisson lighthouse; a steel tower resting on a concrete caisson, equipped with a helicopter platform and powered by a wind generator. The lighthouse had a futuristic design with a helipad on the top of a downward tapering tower, which made great demands on the foundation and the bottom of the tower. In 1992 it was discovered that the foundation had been under-mined and that the lighthouse was threatening to collapse. The problem was remedied by filling with rubble, but the problem recurred in 2004. Deemed too dangerous to repair the lighthouse, it was demolished in 2005 and replaced by the much smaller, marker light / radio beacon.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 LIST OF LIGHTS, RADIO AIDS AND FOG SIGNALS 2014 BALTIC SEA WITH KATTEGAT, BELTS AND SOUND AND GULF OF BOTHNIA, p. 216. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agancy. Retrieved 12 August 2014.

External links