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larry wrote: John Navas wrote in : Marine radars have a limited vertical beam width, and the transponder should be mounted above or below that vertical pattern. See the Handbook: WRONG! Geez, John.... Marine radars have limited HORIZONTAL beamwidth so you can see 3 targets kinda close together as 3 targets, not 1 blob. They have WIDE VERTICAL beamwidth so they are pointing at the horizon EVEN WHEN THE BOAT IS HEELED OVER OR ROLLING! If they had narrow vertical beamwidth, the only time you'd see the target is in flat water or at the marina dock! "Limited" is such a nondescript word. It really doesn't define what either of you are trying to say. Marine Radar Antennas, typically have a 25 Degree Vertical Beamwidth, Now to some that may be "Limited", (25° as opposed to 360°) but when compared to a Marine Radars Horizontal Beamwidth, (Typically 2° to 6°) it is not "Limited" at all. John's Point, was that the Radar Transponder MUST be mounted Clearly OUTSIDE the Vertical Beamwidth of the Onboard Radar, so as to not be triggered by the operation of the onboard Radar. This is correct. Bruce in alaska -- Bruce in alaska add path after fast to reply |
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