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#1
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I was listening to Sydney radar the area frequency and 122.7 my VHF radio
scans very fast on Saturday afternoon they picked up a glider with the radar as a primary target and it was giving them height as well they are they running new software to filter aircraft. No wonder when persons are posting IGC files on the OLC infringing Sydney's controlled airspace in the same glider maybe they will get the message when the federal police turn up and arrest them. -- Mal www.mals.net |
#2
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Mal wrote:
I was listening to Sydney radar the area frequency and 122.7 my VHF radio scans very fast on Saturday afternoon they picked up a glider with the radar as a primary target and it was giving them height as well they are they running new software to filter aircraft. Do you know how they were getting the altitude? Perhaps by reports from other aircraft? |
#3
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
Do you know how they were getting the altitude? Perhaps by reports from other aircraft? Can't the radar measure the angle between the target and the horizon? This would give you an estimate of altitude, as you know the distance... Regards -Gerhard -- Gerhard Wesp / Holderenweg 2 / CH-8134 Adliswil +41 (0)76 505 1149 (mobile) / +41 (0)44 668 1878 (office) +41 (0)44 668 1818 (fax) http://gwesp.tx0.org/ |
#4
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Unless the glider was transponder equipped, the only
radar that could give the height would be a Precision Approach Radar (Talkdown). This only scans 10 degrees either side of the runway centreline and is not widely used at civilian airports. If ATC knew the height I think it would have been via a report from another aircraft. At 17:42 21 August 2006, Gerhard Wesp wrote: Eric Greenwell wrote: Do you know how they were getting the altitude? Perhaps by reports from other aircraft? Can't the radar measure the angle between the target and the horizon? This would give you an estimate of altitude, as you know the distance... Regards -Gerhard -- Gerhard Wesp / Holderenweg 2 / CH-8134 Adliswil +41 (0)76 505 1149 (mobile) / +41 (0)44 668 1878 (office) +41 (0)44 668 1818 (fax) http://gwesp.tx0.org/ |
#5
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Gerhard Wesp wrote:
Eric Greenwell wrote: Do you know how they were getting the altitude? Perhaps by reports from other aircraft? Can't the radar measure the angle between the target and the horizon? This would give you an estimate of altitude, as you know the distance... The standard ATC radar has a narrow beam horizontally and a broad beam vertically, so no, normally it can't measure the angle with the ground. Take a look at most radar antennas, and you see the antenna shape is the opposite of this (broad horizontally, narrow vertically). To have a narrow beam horizontally and vertically would require a antenna that was large in both directions. Even so, it would not be accurate enough for ATC purposes, nor would it measure what the airplane's altimeter was measuring, thus the use of transponders. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA www.motorglider.org - Download "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" |
#6
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Mark Dickson wrote:
Unless the glider was transponder equipped, the only radar that could give the height would be a Precision Approach Radar (Talkdown). This only scans 10 degrees either side of the runway centreline and is not widely used at civilian airports. If ATC knew the height I think it would have been via a report from another aircraft. Back in "good old days" I worked on a CPS 6B which gave height by a second "slant" beam displaced from the "vert" beam by, as I remember 10 deg. Gosh that was a LOOOOONG time ago. :-) ...lew... |
#7
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At 23:00 21 August 2006, Lew Hartswick wrote:
Mark Dickson wrote: Unless the glider was transponder equipped, the only radar that could give the height would be a Precision Approach Radar (Talkdown). This only scans 10 degrees either side of the runway centreline and is not widely used at civilian airports. If ATC knew the height I think it would have been via a report from another aircraft. I think you will find that air defence radars are very capable of giving an accurate height and in many cases civilian air traffic radars are taking a feed from the very same radar heads as the military. Plus there is a deal more co-operation between the civilian and military radars in the present climate. The feed that the civilian world gets from the military heads is only cut down in range and tailored to the need of the controller. Many years ago I visited a local airfield radar and they did not have their own radar transmitter. They used a feed from the Air Defence radar situated just down the road. |
#8
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![]() "Don Johnstone" wrote in message ... At 23:00 21 August 2006, Lew Hartswick wrote: Mark Dickson wrote: Unless the glider was transponder equipped, the only radar that could give the height would be a Precision Approach Radar (Talkdown). This only scans 10 degrees either side of the runway centreline and is not widely used at civilian airports. If ATC knew the height I think it would have been via a report from another aircraft. I think you will find that air defence radars are very capable of giving an accurate height and in many cases civilian air traffic radars are taking a feed from the very same radar heads as the military. Plus there is a deal more co-operation between the civilian and military radars in the present climate. The feed that the civilian world gets from the military heads is only cut down in range and tailored to the need of the controller. Many years ago I visited a local airfield radar and they did not have their own radar transmitter. They used a feed from the Air Defence radar situated just down the road. http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/radar-reflector-e.html http://www.cap.gov/visitors/news/cap...=2005&month=12 Would appear that they can get a primary paint sent an email to airservices and asked the same question I asked in here lets see what they say. Mal |
#9
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I think you will find that and ordinary primary radar
can give an approximate height when processed. This 'Height' is not accurate enough to provide seperation for controllers but is available. The slant range to the target is used as one measurement and the other is the point on the globe over which the target is. with two sides known of a right angled triangle the third side is calculated by using Pythagorus, the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides, the slant range being the hypotenuse. At 03:36 22 August 2006, Mal wrote: 'Don Johnstone' wrote in message ... At 23:00 21 August 2006, Lew Hartswick wrote: Mark Dickson wrote: Unless the glider was transponder equipped, the only radar that could give the height would be a Precision Approach Radar (Talkdown). This only scans 10 degrees either side of the runway centreline and is not widely used at civilian airports. If ATC knew the height I think it would have been via a report from another aircraft. I think you will find that air defence radars are very capable of giving an accurate height and in many cases civilian air traffic radars are taking a feed from the very same radar heads as the military. Plus there is a deal more co-operation between the civilian and military radars in the present climate. The feed that the civilian world gets from the military heads is only cut down in range and tailored to the need of the controller. Many years ago I visited a local airfield radar and they did not have their own radar transmitter. They used a feed from the Air Defence radar situated just down the road. http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/radar-reflector-e.html http://www.cap.gov/visitors/news/cap...ex.cfm?fuseact ion=display&nodeID=6192&newsID=1918&year=2005&mo nth=12 Would appear that they can get a primary paint sent an email to airservices and asked the same question I asked in here lets see what they say. Mal |
#10
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Air traffic Controllers have no way of telling the
altitude of an aircraft without SSR or a talkdown radar. Air defenders used height finding radar which is not available at civil units (I don't think it's in use anymore; maybe). Some civil units in the UK have made use of Air Traffic radar at military units, but this is straight forward ATC equipment, the same as at any airport. At 11:06 22 August 2006, Don Johnstone wrote: I think you will find that and ordinary primary radar can give an approximate height when processed. This 'Height' is not accurate enough to provide seperation for controllers but is available. The slant range to the target is used as one measurement and the other is the point on the globe over which the target is. with two sides known of a right angled triangle the third side is calculated by using Pythagorus, the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides, the slant range being the hypotenuse. At 03:36 22 August 2006, Mal wrote: 'Don Johnstone' wrote in message ... At 23:00 21 August 2006, Lew Hartswick wrote: Mark Dickson wrote: Unless the glider was transponder equipped, the only radar that could give the height would be a Precision Approach Radar (Talkdown). This only scans 10 degrees either side of the runway centreline and is not widely used at civilian airports. If ATC knew the height I think it would have been via a report from another aircraft. I think you will find that air defence radars are very capable of giving an accurate height and in many cases civilian air traffic radars are taking a feed from the very same radar heads as the military. Plus there is a deal more co-operation between the civilian and military radars in the present climate. The feed that the civilian world gets from the military heads is only cut down in range and tailored to the need of the controller. Many years ago I visited a local airfield radar and they did not have their own radar transmitter. They used a feed from the Air Defence radar situated just down the road. http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/radar-reflector-e.html http://www.cap.gov/visitors/news/cap...ex.cfm?fuseact ion=display&nodeID=6192&newsID=1918&year=2005&m onth=12 Would appear that they can get a primary paint sent an email to airservices and asked the same question I asked in here lets see what they say. Mal |
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