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![]() "Larry W4CSC" wrote in message ... On Fri, 05 Sep 2003 03:16:26 GMT, "Ed Kelly" wrote: How high is that antenna mounted? It would have to be 70' up to have a horizon at 12 miles. If it was mounted that high you would only be able to see ships higher than 70' at 24 miles. Those would have to be some pretty big ships for you to see them at ranges of well over 24 miles, no matter how powerful the radar. Ed Antenna's up about 45'. Radio horizon is further than your visual horizon and can be extended by temperature inversions. The other thing to consider is the height of the target. A radar reflector a hundred feet above the water or a large ship can be seen way further than the horizon because he sticks up OVER it for quite a distance. I was using a radio horizon calculator to get those numbers. 45' gives you a 9 mile horizon. That means that (ignoring anomalies caused by atmospheric conditions) that to see a target at 24 miles it needs to be 120' tall. I'm not arguing that you can't see 24 miles with that 2KW radar - in fact a 12 KW radar would not be able to see any further than your radar given the same conditions. Many people seem to think a higher power radar will allow them to "see" further, while they are really constrained by geometry rather than power. What the higher power will do is give you better discrimination (they will see targets that you cannot).. Ed |
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