Each year SA Power Networks manufactures around 4,500 Stobie poles at a plant in
Angle Park, South Australia. The service life of a Stobie pole is predicted to be in excess of 80 years. It is now commonly regarded as a South Australian icon. Its modern construction is a composite of two steel I-beams connected intermittently by bolts to manage compressive
buckling, with the gap between the beams filled with concrete. The bolts transfer the
shear, with an equal number of bolts above and below ground. The poles are tapered from ground level to the top and the toe. This construction uses the
tensile properties of the steel, giving the poles excellent properties in bending. Stobie pole strength in the strong direction may be up to 4.5 times the weak direction strength. Small holes through the concrete enable attachment of modular cross-arms, insulators and other hardware. The poles are fireproof, rotproof, and termiteproof. Stobie poles are widely regarded in Australia to be dangerous to vehicles, with collisions sometimes "almost cutting the vehicle in half". Stobie pole designs are calculated to ensure the installation uses a suitably sized pole. Factors such as physical mass (
static load) of transformers, cross beams, voltage regulators, protection devices, conductors (including tension), etc. are considered, and the wind loading (dynamic load) of this equipment must also be calculated. In some cases the
wind loading factors far exceed the static load values. ==Artistic use==