Jean
Well-Known Member
Is it acceptable to remove your old passive radar reflector once fitted with an active type, that does of course need a power supply to run it?
Regulation V/19 requires all small raft to fit a "radar reflector" "if practicable". I'd I suggest that we would have difficulty justifying not having one fitted in a court of Law, even if the boat is under 15m. The question really is "would an active one be considered acceptable even if you did have enough space for a passive one"? SOLAS was probable written before active ones became widely available for the leisure boat user, has it been amended to reflect this since?
I suppose from a practical point of view, it depends on the type of passive reflector. Those clear plastic tube thingies are fairly useless according to QinetiQ (OUSO paper) so why carry them anyway. The better big rain catchers and fat white cylinders might be worth keeping at least to meet SOLAS regs. From a legal point of view, I guess it's all belt-and-braces to show willing on all possible means. Keeping the volts on an active radar transponder seems to be the best way of being seen by radar. (Note bla-bla of X and S band and whether the watch is awake etc..)
if less than 150 gross tonnage and if practicable, a radar reflector, or other means, to enable detection by ships navigating by radar at both 9 and 3 GHz;
Have a look at http://www.ybw.com/pbo/pdfs/radar_reflectors.pdfIf you are referring to the 100 diameter plastimo ones I am not sure they are useless
Those clear plastic tube thingies are fairly useless according to QinetiQ ...
I think it is still a lot better comparison of reflector performance than the anecdotal "XXX said I have a good radar signature" stories.The Qinetiq report was a very shoddy piece of work.
I think it is still a lot better comparison of reflector performance ...
RCA is the measure of a radar reflector's performance.The problem is that they didn;t test performance; they only tested one particular property and extrapolated performance from that. It would be like YM measuring a test boat's sail area, ballast ratio and stability curve and then predicting sailing perfromance from that.
Maybe your CARD only detects X-Band and the ferry was using S-Band? Of course, maybe the ferry was in breach of SOLAS by not having both radars operational. Anyway a CARD is not a radar reflector, so how is you anecdote relevant?My anecdote? My boat came with a CARD (Collsion Avoidance Radar Detector). Unless the rotating thing on top of the Rothesay ferry is a dummy, the CARD does precisely three-fifths of stuff all.
The problem is that they didn;t test performance; they only tested one particular property and extrapolated performance from that. It would be like YM measuring a test boat's sail area, ballast ratio and stability curve and then predicting sailing perfromance from that.
My anecdote? My boat came with a CARD (Collsion Avoidance Radar Detector). Unless the rotating thing on top of the Rothesay ferry is a dummy, the CARD does precisely three-fifths of stuff all.
... Anyway a CARD is not a radar reflector, so how is you anecdote relevant?
RCA is the measure of a radar reflector's performance.
Maybe your CARD only detects X-Band and the ferry was using S-Band? Of course, maybe the ferry was in breach of SOLAS by not having both radars operational. Anyway a CARD is not a radar reflector, so how is you anecdote relevant?
I see your point. Certainly the X-Band only RTEs would not really satisfy the SOLAS requirement:If CARD type gadgets cannot be relied upon, it requires a leap of faith to rely on active repeaters.