peter2407
Well-Known Member
Permanently, potential fog, actual fog, long voyages or what?
Also, where and how?
Also, where and how?
Any radar reflector is better than no radar reflector is my opinion. The Octahedral type are an approximation of a parabola which, in the catch the rain orientation, reflect radar energy back from whence it came. Their big advantage is that they are cheap (£10:00 to £20:00) and easy to fit (or pull) up the mast.
Active radar reflectors are better however, they are not cheap neither are they easy to fit as they need to be powered all the time. Oh, and how do you know that it is switched on and working?
See and be seen is the thing to keep in mind.
73s de
Johnth
Active radar reflectors are better however, they are not cheap neither are they easy to fit as they need to be powered all the time. Oh, and how do you know that it is switched on and working?
active radar reflectors are better however, they are not cheap neither are they easy to fit as they need to be powered all the time. Oh, and how do you know that it is switched on and working? Johnth
Back in 2001 (might have been 2) SOLAS "V" came out. Safety Of Lives At Sea version 5.
Amongst other things SOLAS V states that all vessels will have a permanent RADAR reflector mounted where ever it is possible.
Means that your RADAR reflector should be mounted at all time.
As for where around 2/3 rds of the way up the mast seems to be the best.
The Quintico report found that the Echo Max reflectors where the best passive but also went on to report that active "RTEs" were better by a good margin.
Hope that this helps.
Simes
Apart from the LED power indicator, there is a second LED which flashes whenever the unit is active (responding to a radar paint). Although nothing is failure proof, if you're in an active area like the Solent then you'll see the unit is working as the VTS radars will trigger the RTE out to the Nab Tower.
Once away from land, however, many commercial ships switch from X band radar to the longer range S band, which will not trigger the RTE, so a passive reflector, although far less effective in S band, is a good idea too.
Rob.
Highjacking the thread slightly, does anyone know whether a solid wooden mast will attenuate radar signals? KS has a permanent radar reflector of the narrow cylindrical type, but it's mounted on the front of the mast. Will it be hidden from radars coming up from behind?
Pete
In our brave new world of carbon fibre it may well be possible to build “something” into a sail that will reflect Radar. There may well be cost and weight implications however, what about when the wind is no more and we are motoring?
73s de
Johnth
As an aside, one of those "always wondered" things. Sails would make presumably excellent radar targets if they reflected the radar energy. How fine a metallised thread mesh in the material weave would work? I suspect this is one of those things tyhat gets wondered about now and again but there are perfectly good reasons for not doing so. Can't be economic ones, the careful PBO types notwithstanding, some boaters will buy anything![]()