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Marc Heusser alid
wrote in : In a word: Resolution. A radome antenna has 4 to 6 degrees horizontal beam width, a 4' slot antenna less has 1.8 degrees. Makes all the difference in tight places like rivers. Like seeing one or two ships. Or a small ship or sea clutter. I would go as far as saying that horizontal resolution is the only specification to worry about. What has not been captured by the antenna is never going to show up on the display. Ok, let's talk about the low vs high resolution antennas.... Low is simple, it has a huge beamwidth, relatively speaking. When the boat is rolled over and the antenna towards the target is pointing, mostly, into the sea, its wide vertical antenna pattern is more likely to see "something" out 4 miles on this rotation. Because the target is "in the beam" for a much longer length of time, as the beam rotates around during this rolling/pitching motion of the boat, the receiver is more likely to see the target for that brief instant the antenna isn't pointed at the moon or Davy Jones' Locker, than it would be if the beam were "really narrow" where, even if the antenna were mounted on a oil rig and not pitching and rolling on a Sea Ray...31' or not. Every rotation of a really narrow beam antenna only leaves the target illuminated with RF and looking through that really narrow "slot" with the receiver for a much shorter instance. Try it. Touch your middle finger to your thumb making a big hole to look through. Stand rigid on the rolling/pitching deck without trying to keep your "sight" on the "target" way off in your vision. The target shows up in the big hole all the time you're looking through it....and would return our radar RF to the receiver looking through that hole so we'd get a return on the screen. Now, roll your forefinger up as tight as you can in the crook of your thumb, making a small hole to simulate looking at the same target through this massive, high resolution, antenna array. Point this hole at the target, but stand rigid not trying to follow the target around with the pitching and rolling of the boat. You can hardly see the target any more as it rolls in and out of the hole. The only time the receiver will see the target is when its rotating by the target synchronizes with the boat being somewhat level, which happens less and less often as the hole gets smaller. Actually, the hole, the window the radar looks through is a narrow vertical slot, narrow horizontally but, we hope with all that rolling/pitching, WIDE vertically. But, you get the idea of what I'm talking about. Another low vs high phenomenon that's pretty easy to grasp is in waves and troughs. The low-res antenna, the big hole, paints the target far longer than the high-res, narrow beam antenna. Being wide, it has a far better chance of seeing "something" if the waves are high because it paints the target LONGER on each rotation. The very short painting the high res big antenna does, has less chance of seeing the target around the coincidental wave. All this is why surface search radars on big ships, even Navy/CG ships, is a relatively small, large aperture antenna, not some huge, high-gain array with really high resolution....which is the targeting antenna for the missiles/gunnery. There's still that CLOSE IN target, the one you are about to run over.... It's ALWAYS much better to paint all the targets in that 1/8th mile range, no matter whether it's the return from a 40hp Yamaha outboard, the only radar reflector on his plastic fishing boat, or the little nun bouys in the channel. The CLOSE IN targets really need to make a blob in the rainstorm and fog....to hell with containerships 12 miles away. That's why it's VERY important to keep the antenna LOW, not shooting over the targets just so you can see that containership and brag about it to "her". Larry -- While in Mexico, I didn't have to press 1 for Spanish. While in Iran, I didn't have to press 1 for Farsi, either. While in Florida, I had to press 2 for English. It just isn't fair. |
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