Stealth definition

Stealth or “Stealth Technology” means to minimize adverse aesthetic and visual impacts on the land, property, buildings, and other facilities adjacent to, surrounding, and in generally the same area as the requested location of such Wireless Telecommunications Facilities, which shall mean using the least visually and physically intrusive facility that is not technologically or commercially impracticable under the facts and circumstances,
Stealth or “Stealth Siting Technique” means a design or treatment that minimizes adverse aesthetic and visual impacts on the land, property, buildings, and other facilities adjacent to, surrounding, and in generally the same area as the requested location of such Wireless Telecommunications Facilities, which shall mean building the least visually and physically intrusive facility and Complex that is not technologically or commercially impracticable under the facts and circumstances. Stealth technique includes such techniques as i) DAS or its functional equivalent; or ii) camouflage where the Tower is disguised to make it less visually obtrusive and not recognizable to the average person as a Wireless Facility or Complex.
Stealth or “Stealth Technology” means minimizing adverse aesthetic and visual impacts on the land, property, buildings, and other facilities adjacent to, surrounding, and in generally the same area as the requested location of such Wireless Telecommunications Facilities or Small Cell Wireless Facilities by using the least visually and physically intrusive facility.

Examples of Stealth in a sentence

  • See James Clark, “Whistleblower Accuses Largest US Military Shipbuilder of Putting ‘American Lives at Risk’ by Falsifying Tests on Submarine Stealth Coating,” Task & Purpose, October 3, 2019.

  • See William Cole, “Navy Subs Still Show Issue with Stealth Coating,” Military.com, March 6, 2017.

  • Stealth ServersUsually, all of the zone’s authoritative servers are listed in NS records in the parent zone.

  • Stealth servers can be used for keeping a local copy of a zone to speed up access to the zone’s records or to make sure that the zone is available even if all the ”official” servers for the zone are inaccessible.

  • Stealth design shall be designed and constructed to substantially conform to surrounding building designs or natural settings, so as to be visually unobtrusive.


More Definitions of Stealth

Stealth means any tower or telecommunications facility which is designed to enhance compatibility with adjacent land uses, including but not limited to, architecturally screened roof-mounted antennas, antennas integrated into architectural elements, and towers designed to look other than like a tower
Stealth means concealment elements, measures and techniques that mimic or blend with the underlying structure, surrounding environment and adjacent uses to screen all transmission equipment from public view and integrate the wireless facility into the built or natural environment such that, given the particular context, the average, untrained observer would not recognize the structure as a wireless facility. Stealth concealment techniques include, without limitation: (1) transmission equipment placed completely within existing or replacement architectural features such that the installation causes no visible change in the underlying structure; (2) new architectural features that mimic or blend with the underlying or surrounding structures in style, proportion and construction quality such that they appear part of the original structure’s design; and (3) concealment elements, measures and techniques that mimic or blend with the underlying structure, surrounding environment and adjacent uses
Stealth means a design that minimizes the visual impact of Wireless Communication Facilities by camouflaging, disguising, screening or blending them into the surrounding environment. Examples of stealth design include but are not limited to facilities disguised as trees (monopines), flagpoles, utility and light Poles, bell Towers, clock Towers, ball field lights and architecturally screened roof-mounted Antennas or flush mounted Antennas that are either painted to match or enclosed in an architecturally, applicable box.
Stealth means concealment techniques that make a wireless facility look like something other than a wireless facility. Stealth concealment techniques include, without limitation: (1) transmission equipment placed completely within existing or replacement architectural features such that the installation causes no visible change in the underlying support structure and (2) new architectural features that mimic or blend with the underlying or surrounding structures in style, proportion and construction quality.
Stealth means concealment techniques that completely screen all transmission equipment from public view and architecturally integrate the macro facility into the built environment such that, given the particular context, the average, untrained observer would not recognize the structure as a macro facility. Stealth concealment techniques include, without limitation: (1) transmission equipment placed completely within existing or replacement architectural features such that the installation causes no visible change in the underlying support structure; and (2) new architectural features that mimic or blend with the underlying or surrounding structures in style, proportion and construction quality.
Stealth means any Wireless Telecommunications Facility that is architecturally integrated into a building or other concealing structure, such that no portion of any antenna, antenna equipment, or any other apparatus associated with the function of the facility is visible. The concealing structure shall have an aesthetically pleasing architectural design which fits into the context of its surroundings.
Stealth means a wireless tower or base station designed to look like some feature other than a wireless tower or base station to a reasonable person. Examples include, but are not limited to: (1) wireless equipment placed completely within existing architectural features such that the installation causes no visible change to the underlying structure; (2) new architectural features that match the underlying building in architectural style, physical proportion and construction-materials quality; (3) flush-to-grade underground equipment vaults with flush-to-grade entry hatches, with wireless equipment placed completely within.