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In article ,
Wayne.B wrote:

On Wed, 19 Jan 2005 04:43:52 GMT, "Richard P." wrote:

Out towards the open Pacific Ocean at approx the 30 mile mark on his 12 inch
display was a
perfect square about the size of an eraser found on the end of a typical
pencil. The return was
stationary and changed aspect whenever he manouvered his vessel. The
"square" was hollow in
appearance.


============================================

Some of the Raytheon sets use a hollow square to denote a target that
is being tracked. My guess is that the set inadvertantly went into a
mode where it thought it was tracking a distant object.


Nope, not something that a RADAR as discribed could do. These were
analog Reatime video displays, and didn't have any ARPA features
included.

I suspect that it could have been one of the early Xband Transponders
but how it could be triggered at that distance without being at some
altitude, would be an interesting question.


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