peter@
New Member
Any pointers on aligning a cylindrical radar reflector? My thought was that anything off vertical would reduce effective reflection from a ship-to-ship interrogation.
mmm., looks like the best advice is to bin my cylindrical reflector; the performance of which is judged by MAIB as being so poor with a heel of only 1deg that "it would be better not fitted, lest be lulled into a false sense of security". I might ask the chandler for my money back.
mmm., looks like the best advice is to bin my cylindrical reflector; the performance of which is judged by MAIB as being so poor with a heel of only 1deg that "it would be better not fitted, lest be lulled into a false sense of security". I might ask the chandler for my money back.
Don't waste your time and money....
Well, if you have an aluminium mast and any kind of engine. They will give a much bigger reflection than some stupid bit of tin bolted onto yer mast.
Simple Questions:
Is your aluminium mast got more surface area than the reflector you've bought?
Is your mast waving about up there going to line up to reflect a radar signal any better or worse than a ' radar reflector waving about up there?
How much beer could you buy for what you paid for said 'radar reflector?
And breathe................
Surface area is only one consideration and probably less important that the design of the reflector.
I have posted a link to the scientific tests carried out by QinetiQ on a number of popular reflectors.
Please post a link to the results of similar tests that you have carried out on the effectiveness of masts and engines as radar reflectors.
I suspect you have not performed such tests, cannot therefore post a link to any results and conclude, therefore, that your post above is worthless garbage.
.
If you hoist a reflector up to the spreaders and let it swing it will not remain upright due to its inertia. I was wondering, if you take a shock cord down from the base to damp its motion, would it improve its performance? Has anyone tried this and found a workable length and thickness of shock cord?
Rob.
I suspect you have not performed such tests, cannot therefore post a link to any results and conclude, therefore, that your post above is worthless garbage.
.
If you hoist a reflector up to the spreaders and let it swing it will not remain upright due to its inertia. I was wondering, if you take a shock cord down from the base to damp its motion, would it improve its performance? Has anyone tried this and found a workable length and thickness of shock cord?
Rob.
Yep - corners are as good as it gets provided that waves hit at a reasonable angle. The problem is that they are considerably less good with "off axis" waves, so the classic octahedral design has loads of "nulls" and is particularly bad when heeled (or hoist the wrong way)When NASA spent billions of dollars putting men on the moon they left small arrays of corner cube reflectors, just like of your bog standard radar reflector, to perform ranging measurements from earth. If there was a better way to reflect electromagnetic radiation I think they would have found it.
I suspect you have not performed such tests, cannot therefore post a link to any results and conclude, therefore, that your post above is worthless garbage.
.