RX12874
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RX12874, also known as the Passive Detection System (PDS) and by its nickname "Winkle", was a
radar detector A radar detector is an electronic device used by motorists to detect if their speed is being monitored by police or law enforcement using a radar gun. Most radar detectors are used so the driver can reduce the car's speed before being ticketed ...
system used as part of the
Royal Air Force The Royal Air Force (RAF) is the Air force, air and space force of the United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies. It was formed towards the end of the World War I, First World War on 1 April 1918, on the merger of t ...
's
Linesman/Mediator Linesman/Mediator was a dual-purpose civil and military radar network in the United Kingdom between the 1960s and 1984. The military side (Linesman) was replaced by the Improved United Kingdom Air Defence Ground Environment (IUKADGE), while the ...
radar Radar is a system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), direction ( azimuth and elevation angles), and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It is a radiodetermination method used to detect and track ...
network until the early 1980s. Winkle passed out of service along with the rest of the Linesman system as the IUKADGE network replaced it. Winkle was developed in the late 1950s to counter the
carcinotron A backward wave oscillator (BWO), also called carcinotron or backward wave tube, is a vacuum tube that is used to generate microwaves up to the Terahertz radiation, terahertz range. Belonging to the traveling-wave tube family, it is an electroni ...
, a radar jammer so effective that it was initially believed it would render all long-range radars useless. Winkle used a network of stations to listen for carcinotron broadcasts, and combined the information from them to track the jammer aircraft as effectively as a radar could. The system was based on a series of High Speed Aerial (HSA) installations and AMES Type 85 ("Blue Yeoman") radars. Both were used as receivers; the Type 85 was used primarily to measure the time of arrival of the signal, while the HSA rapidly scanned horizontally to extract a bearing. Information from HSAs and the Type 85s was combined in a correlator that used
triangulation In trigonometry and geometry, triangulation is the process of determining the location of a point by forming triangles to the point from known points. Applications In surveying Specifically in surveying, triangulation involves only angle m ...
and time-of-flight information to determine the location of the jammer-carrying aircraft. Once the location was determined, it was manually input into the interception controller's displays as if it were a normal radar return, distinguished only by its small circle icon instead of a single dot. Operators could decrease the Type 85 receiver sensitivity while the radar passed that location, so that the jamming did not obscure the display at nearby angles. Combined with
identification friend or foe Identification, friend or foe (IFF) is a combat identification system designed for command and control. It uses a transponder that listens for an ''interrogation'' signal and then sends a ''response'' that identifies the broadcaster. IFF syst ...
(IFF) signals, this allowed a
fighter aircraft Fighter aircraft (early on also ''pursuit aircraft'') are military aircraft designed primarily for air-to-air combat. In military conflict, the role of fighter aircraft is to establish air supremacy, air superiority of the battlespace. Domina ...
's signal to remain visible and interceptions could proceed as normal.


History


Carcinotron

In 1950, engineers at the French company CSF (now part of
Thales Group Thales S.A., Trade name, trading as Thales Group (), is a French multinational corporation, multinational aerospace and defence industry, defence corporation specializing in electronics. It designs, develops and manufactures a wide variety of aer ...
) introduced the
carcinotron A backward wave oscillator (BWO), also called carcinotron or backward wave tube, is a vacuum tube that is used to generate microwaves up to the Terahertz radiation, terahertz range. Belonging to the traveling-wave tube family, it is an electroni ...
, a
microwave Microwave is a form of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths shorter than other radio waves but longer than infrared waves. Its wavelength ranges from about one meter to one millimeter, corresponding to frequency, frequencies between 300&n ...
-producing
vacuum tube A vacuum tube, electron tube, thermionic valve (British usage), or tube (North America) is a device that controls electric current flow in a high vacuum between electrodes to which an electric voltage, potential difference has been applied. It ...
that could be tuned across a wide range of frequencies by changing a single input voltage. By continually sweeping through the frequencies of known
radar Radar is a system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), direction ( azimuth and elevation angles), and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It is a radiodetermination method used to detect and track ...
s, it would overpower the radar's own reflections, and blind them. Its extremely wide
bandwidth Bandwidth commonly refers to: * Bandwidth (signal processing) or ''analog bandwidth'', ''frequency bandwidth'', or ''radio bandwidth'', a measure of the width of a frequency range * Bandwidth (computing), the rate of data transfer, bit rate or thr ...
meant that a single carcinotron could be used to send jamming signals against any radar it was likely to meet, and the rapid tuning meant it could do so against multiple radars at the same time, or sweep through all potential frequencies to produce
barrage jamming Barrage jamming is an electronic warfare technique that attempts to blind (" jam") radar systems by filling the display with noise, rendering the broadcaster's ''blip'' invisible on the display, and often those in the nearby area as well. "Barr ...
. The carcinotron was revealed publicly in November 1953. The Admiralty Signals and Radar Establishment purchased one and fit it to a Handley Page Hastings named ''Catherine'', testing it against the latest AMES Type 80 radar late that year. As they feared, it rendered the radar display completely unreadable, filled with noise that hid any real targets. Useful jamming was accomplished even when the aircraft was under the
radar horizon The radar horizon is a critical area of performance for air traffic, aircraft detection systems, defined by the distance at which the radar beam rises enough above the Earth's surface to make detection of a target at the lowest level possible. I ...
, in which case other aircraft had to be to the sides before they were visible outside the jamming signal. The system was so effective that it appeared to render long-range radar useless.


ROTOR

The Type 80 was a key part of the
ROTOR ROTOR was an elaborate air defence radar system built by the British Government in the early 1950s to counter possible attack by Soviet bombers. To get it operational as quickly as possible, it was initially made up primarily of WWII-era syst ...
system, a comprehensive radar and control network covering the entire
British Isles The British Isles are an archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean, North Atlantic Ocean off the north-western coast of continental Europe, consisting of the islands of Great Britain, Ireland, the Isle of Man, the Inner Hebrides, Inner and Outer Hebr ...
. The ''Catherine'' tests suggested that the system would be rendered impotent before it was even fully installed. The
Royal Aircraft Establishment The Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) was a British research establishment, known by several different names during its history, that eventually came under the aegis of the Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom), UK Ministry of Defence (MoD), bef ...
(RAE) immediately began developing their own carcinotrons for the
V Bomber The "V bombers" were the Royal Air Force (RAF) aircraft during the 1950s and 1960s that comprised the Nuclear weapons and the United Kingdom, United Kingdom's strategic nuclear strike force known officially as the V force or Bomber Command Mai ...
force under the name Indigo Bracket, while solutions to the jamming problem for the RAF's radars were studied. The first consideration was that the carcinotron provided a relatively weak signal, on the order of 5 kW. When used in barrage mode, this was diluted to perhaps 5 to 10 W per MHz of bandwidth. Due to the radar equation, at long range this was still much stronger than the reflection of the multi-megawatt signal from the radar itself. As the jamming aircraft approached the station, there was some point where the radar began to overpower the jammer, the "self-screening" or "burn-through" point. A very powerful transmitter would increase the range where this occurred. Further improvement could be gained by tightly focusing the beam to put as much power into the reflected signal as possible. The Royal Radar Establishment (RRE) began the development of such a system with
Metropolitan-Vickers Metropolitan-Vickers, Metrovick, or Metrovicks, was a British heavy electrical engineering company of the early-to-mid 20th century formerly known as British Westinghouse. Highly diversified, it was particularly well known for its industrial el ...
(Metrovick) under the name '
Blue Riband The Blue Riband () is an unofficial accolade given to the passenger liner crossing the Atlantic Ocean in regular service with the record highest Velocity, average speed. The term was borrowed from horse racing and was not widely used until ...
'. It was assumed that a jammer could produce as much as 10 W per MHz across the entire
S-band The S band is a designation by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) for a part of the microwave band of the electromagnetic spectrum covering frequencies from 2 to 4 gigahertz (GHz). Thus it crosses the convention ...
. Through the use of twelve 4.5 MW
klystron A klystron is a specialized linear-beam vacuum tube, invented in 1937 by American electrical engineers Russell and Sigurd Varian,Pond, Norman H. "The Tube Guys". Russ Cochran, 2008 p.31-40 which is used as an amplifier for high radio frequenci ...
transmitters broadcast through an enormous antenna system, the Blue Riband produced 11.4 W per MHz of reflected signal at , thereby overpowering the assumed threat. To force the jammer to spread out its signal across a wide band, the radar randomly changed frequencies with every pulse, across a 500 MHz bandwidth.


Changing strategies

Throughout this period, there has been an ongoing debate about the usefulness of air defences. The introduction of the
hydrogen bomb A thermonuclear weapon, fusion weapon or hydrogen bomb (H-bomb) is a second-generation nuclear weapon design. Its greater sophistication affords it vastly greater destructive power than first-generation nuclear bombs, a more compact size, a lo ...
meant a single aircraft could destroy any target, and the higher speeds and altitudes of
bomber aircraft A bomber is a military combat aircraft that utilizes air-to-ground weaponry to drop bombs, launch torpedoes, or deploy air-launched cruise missiles. There are two major classifications of bomber: strategic and tactical. Strategic bombing is d ...
meant the bombs could be dropped from further away. By 1954, the Chief of the Air Staff had concluded that close defence was useless, and began plans to remove
anti-aircraft artillery Anti-aircraft warfare (AAW) is the counter to aerial warfare and includes "all measures designed to nullify or reduce the effectiveness of hostile air action".AAP-6 It encompasses surface-based, subsurface (Submarine#Armament, submarine-lau ...
from the defence. By December, planners believed the only practical role for air defence was to protect the V-force while it was launching. In keeping with this role, over the next few years the number of radar stations and fighters continued to be reduced as the protected area contracted around the Midlands. The
1957 Defence White Paper The 1957 White Paper on Defence (Cmnd. 124) was a British white paper issued in March 1957 setting forth the perceived future of the British military. It had profound effects on all aspects of the defence industry but probably the most affected wa ...
shifted priorities from manned bombers to missiles. The only way to defend against a missile attack was deterrence, so it was absolutely vital that the V-force survive. This meant that any attack, whether by aircraft or missiles, would require the V-force to launch immediately; the interceptor defence could not guarantee their survival even in the case of an all-bomber attack, and could do nothing at all in the case of missiles. By the end of 1957, the idea of any defence of the deterrent force had been abandoned; a bomber attack simply implied missiles were following. Now the bombers would launch to staging areas after receiving any credible threat. The need for the long-distance coverage of Blue Riband disappeared. One new role did emerge. Since the attack would likely come from missiles, the Soviets might attempt to jam the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS) radars by flying aircraft far offshore and using a carcinotron against the relatively narrow band of the BMEWS. They might mask a bomber attack on the V-force bases the same way by jamming the ROTOR radars. Such jamming would require the launch of the V-force while the nature of the threat was determined, and repeated spoofing of this sort could quickly wear out the aircraft and their crews. A system for detecting such an attack and countering it was considered valuable. This role would not require the massive Blue Riband and led to the "Blue Yeoman" concept, combining the electronics of the Blue Riband with a smaller antenna originally developed as an upgrade for the Orange Yeoman radar.
Associated Electrical Industries Associated Electrical Industries (AEI) was a British holding company formed in 1928 through the merger of British Thomson-Houston (BTH) and Metropolitan-Vickers electrical engineering companies. In 1967 AEI was acquired by GEC, to create the UK ...
took up production of this system as the AMES Type 85. As these still had long range, only nine were needed to cover most of the UK. Over time these plans were repeatedly scaled back, eventually producing a system known as Linesman with three stations covering only the southern portions of England, protecting
Bomber Command Bomber Command is an organisational military unit, generally subordinate to the air force of a country. The best known were in Britain and the United States. A Bomber Command is generally used for strategic bombing (although at times, e.g. during t ...
's bases and the BMEWS radar.


Correlation radar

In 1947, the
Royal Aircraft Establishment The Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) was a British research establishment, known by several different names during its history, that eventually came under the aegis of the Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom), UK Ministry of Defence (MoD), bef ...
(RAE) was handed the task of developing
guided missile A missile is an airborne ranged weapon capable of Propulsion, self-propelled flight aided usually by a propellant, jet engine or rocket motor. Historically, 'missile' referred to any projectile that is thrown, shot or propelled towards a targ ...
s, taking over from a previously diverse group of efforts. Several engineers from the RRDE were sent to the RAE at
Farnborough Airport Farnborough Airport (previously called: TAG Farnborough Airport, RAE Farnborough, ICAO Code EGLF) is an operational business/executive general aviation airport in Farnborough, Rushmoor, Hampshire, England. The airport covers about 8% of Rus ...
to aid the design of the tracking and guidance systems. Among the group was George Clarke, who had worked on the LOPGAP missile guidance system but was more interested in advanced radar development. In 1949 Clarke invented a novel sort of
identification friend or foe Identification, friend or foe (IFF) is a combat identification system designed for command and control. It uses a transponder that listens for an ''interrogation'' signal and then sends a ''response'' that identifies the broadcaster. IFF syst ...
(IFF) system that did not have to be triggered by a pulse sent from the ground. Instead, each airborne IFF would broadcast signals at random times. This avoided a problem seen in densely trafficked areas where the interrogation pulse from the ground IFF transceiver would generate so many
transponder In telecommunications, a transponder is a device that, upon receiving a signal, emits a different signal in response. The term is a blend of ''transmitter'' and ''responder''. In air navigation or radio frequency identification, a flight trans ...
replies that they would overlap in time and interfere with each other. In Clarke's system the transponders naturally sent out replies spread out in time, making it much less likely they would overlap. In a traditional IFF, the time between sending the interrogation pulse and its reception allowed the range to the transponder to be determined. In Clarke's system, the receiver did not know when the signal was sent, and could no longer use this method. Instead, the signal would be received by three antennas, and using a device known as a "correlator", better known today as a
matched filter In signal processing, the output of the matched filter is given by correlating a known delayed signal, or ''template'', with an unknown signal to detect the presence of the template in the unknown signal. This is equivalent to convolving the unkn ...
, pulses from a single IFF broadcast could be picked out of the many possible returns. By delaying the signals until they lined up in time, the ''difference'' in time that it took the signal to reach each of the antennas was extracted. The difference between any two antennas results in a continuum of possible locations along a
hyperbola In mathematics, a hyperbola is a type of smooth function, smooth plane curve, curve lying in a plane, defined by its geometric properties or by equations for which it is the solution set. A hyperbola has two pieces, called connected component ( ...
. By making similar measurements between all the stations, A-B, B-C and C-A, three such hyperbolas are constructed, which theoretically intersect at a single point, but more typically form a small triangle due to inherent inaccuracies. The idea was not picked up for development. Later that year, Clarke proposed a new missile tracking and guidance system based on the same basic technique. Due to short flight times, a missile tracking system would want to detect the target as rapidly as possible, but as radars of the era were mechanically rotated, there was a limit to their scanning rate. Clarke proposed using a single large "floodlight" transmitter and three receivers placed at the corners of a baseline triangle. The signal reflecting off of any object in the area would be converted into a location in the same way as the IFF system. All of the targets within the floodlit space could be located simultaneously and continually. A review of the concept suggested there were too many unknown factors to begin serious development, and Clarke was moved to a group working on radar countermeasures.


Winkle

In 1951, Clarke proposed a yet another system based on the same principles, this time as a way to track aircraft carrying jammers. The RAE considered the concept and suggested there were three possible ways it could be used; the first was the three-station concept of Clarke's missile proposal, the second used angular measurements from two widely spaced antennas for simple
triangulation In trigonometry and geometry, triangulation is the process of determining the location of a point by forming triangles to the point from known points. Applications In surveying Specifically in surveying, triangulation involves only angle m ...
, the third used two antennas to find one hyperbola using Clarke's method, and an angular measurement from one of the two stations to intersect with it. While the two-angle solution might appear to be the simplest, it suffers from a problem when there is more than one jammer in an area. Against a single jammer, the receivers both receive the signal and measure its angle relative to their station. When these angles are plotted on a map, they intersect at a single location. If there are two jammer aircraft in the area, both stations will produce two angle measurements, one for each aircraft. When these are plotted on the shared map there will be four intersections; two of these hold aircraft, the other two are "ghosts". A third aircraft increases this to nine points and six ghosts, and so on. The RAF desired a system able to deal with mass raids, so this solution was not appropriate. Correlators avoid this problem because they are extremely sensitive to the details of the signal pulses, to the point where pulses received from two different aircraft will not produce an output signal. Only when the correlator is fed the signals from the same jammer will a result be returned, thereby removing the ambiguity. Using correlation systems as the only measurement system would work, as Clarke originally proposed, but this would require two or three of correlators, which were very expensive. Thus, the concept using one angle measurement and one correlation was selected as the best compromise. Norman Bailey of the
Telecommunications Research Establishment The Telecommunications Research Establishment (TRE) was the main United Kingdom research and development organisation for radio navigation, radar, infra-red detection for heat seeking missiles, and related work for the Royal Air Force (RAF) ...
wrote a paper on the topic, which demonstrated the concept was feasible. In 1954, Marconi was given a contract with the RAE to produce an experimental system under the code-name "Winkle". Most of the development work was carried out at the Marconi Research Centre in Great Baddow. They designed a system that used an antenna with a relatively wide acceptance angle, around 70 degrees horizontally, that was used while measuring the correlation. When a correlation was detected, an electronic scanning system would rapidly measure the angle with an accuracy of about one degree. In order for the correlation to work, the signal from the two widely separated antennas had to be combined in the correlator. This was accomplished using a
microwave relay Microwave transmission is the transmission of information by electromagnetic waves with wavelengths in the microwave frequency range of 300 MHz to 300 GHz (1 m - 1 mm wavelength) of the electromagnetic spectrum. Microwave signal ...
between the stations. An experimental version was constructed between Great Baddow and the Royal Radar Establishment's South Site in
Great Malvern Great Malvern is an area of the civil parish of Malvern, Worcestershire, Malvern, in the Malvern Hills District, Malvern Hills district, in the county of Worcestershire, England. It lies at the foot of the Malvern Hills, a designated Area of O ...
, about apart. A second system with prototype receivers was built in 1956 between RAF Bard Hill in
Norfolk Norfolk ( ) is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in England, located in East Anglia and officially part of the East of England region. It borders Lincolnshire and The Wash to the north-west, the North Sea to the north and eas ...
and RAF Bempton in
Yorkshire Yorkshire ( ) is an area of Northern England which was History of Yorkshire, historically a county. Despite no longer being used for administration, Yorkshire retains a strong regional identity. The county was named after its county town, the ...
. Initial tests were carried out with a jammer placed on a tower between the two stations, and this was used to further develop the correlator system. They eventually moved to aircraft tests. In one test, four aircraft, all carrying jammers, were correctly plotted. When Blue Riband was cancelled in early 1958, and the new threat of BMEWS-jamming was identified, the concept saw renewed interest. A design study for a system as part of the new radar deployment known as Plan Ahead, which later became Linesman, began in late 1958, followed by a development contract in August 1959.


Deployment

The basic concept required the correlator to be fed the same signal from the two antennas. This presented a problem; the correlator took a short time to perform its work, longer than the ideal scanning rate during the angle measurement. This could be solved with separate correlators at every measured angle, but the cost would be prohibitive. A new system was designed that used a small number of correlators and a
computer A computer is a machine that can be Computer programming, programmed to automatically Execution (computing), carry out sequences of arithmetic or logical operations (''computation''). Modern digital electronic computers can perform generic set ...
as a memory system that allowed the detection of potential correlations to take place over the period of the scan. The correlators would make their measurement, store their results in the computer, and then be available for a measurement at another angle. Development went smoothly, and production started in 1962 even while development was ongoing. The first High Speed Aerial was built at Marconi's factory in Bushy Hill and connected to the prototype Blue Yeoman at the RRE in
Great Malvern Great Malvern is an area of the civil parish of Malvern, Worcestershire, Malvern, in the Malvern Hills District, Malvern Hills district, in the county of Worcestershire, England. It lies at the foot of the Malvern Hills, a designated Area of O ...
. The system was demonstrated to a
NATO The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO ; , OTAN), also called the North Atlantic Alliance, is an intergovernmental organization, intergovernmental Transnationalism, transnational military alliance of 32 Member states of NATO, member s ...
delegation in May 1964. The first production site at
RAF Neatishead Remote Radar Head Neatishead ( ), and commonly abbreviated RRH Neatishead, is an air defence radar site operated by the Royal Air Force (RAF). It is located approximately north-east of Norwich in the county of Norfolk, England. Originally kno ...
was planned to start testing in October 1965, and the two following stations at RAF Staxton Wold and
RAF Boulmer Royal Air Force Boulmer or more simply RAF Boulmer is a Royal Air Force station near Alnwick in Northumberland, England, and is home to Aerospace Surveillance and Control System (ASACS) Force Command, Control and Reporting Centre (CRC) Boulmer ...
were completed ahead of schedule in early 1966. The first baseline using these three stations began testing in March 1966. After considerable testing and some minor corrections, the Staxton Wold site passed its acceptance trials in May/June 1968, and was handed to the RAF in October. Boulmer and Dundonald followed in November, and Neatishead in December.


Replacement

Although the development of the PDS went fairly smoothly, the same was not true of the rest of the Linesman system. The Type 85 radars were repeatedly delayed and did not begin operation until 1968. The central control station in the London area was not fully functional until November 1973. By that time any plans to expand Linesman had been abandoned. The central site, known as L1, was not hardened. When Linesman was designed in the late 1950s, it was assumed that any war would quickly turn nuclear, and if H-bombs were going off there was no point in trying to prevent L1's destruction. However, as the
USSR The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR), commonly known as the Soviet Union, was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 until Dissolution of the Soviet ...
began to reach strategic parity with NATO in the late 1960s, this thinking changed. Now the idea of nuclear exchanges early in the war was no longer credible. It appeared that a lengthy
conventional war Conventional warfare is a form of warfare conducted by using conventional weapons and battlefield tactics between two or more states in open confrontation. The forces on each side are well-defined and fight by using weapons that target primarily ...
would precede any nuclear one, or never become nuclear. In this setting, the Soviets could bomb the shore-side radars or even L1 with conventional weapons without fear of sparking a nuclear war. They would then have unfettered access to the UK's airspace. Since the Linesman system was designed primarily for early warning and anti-jamming during a short all-out nuclear war, it did not have the capability needed to deal with follow-up attacks. This shift in perceived threat implied the Linesman system was extremely vulnerable. Worse, the carcinotron might be used against the microwave links between the stations, rendering the system useless. Even before it reached its Phase 1 availability, it was decided to abandon further improvements to the system and use those funds to design and purchase its replacement as soon as possible. Marconi had already been developing new radar systems using a unique receiver design and responded to this need by introducing the Marconi Martello series of
passive electronically scanned array A passive electronically scanned array (PESA), also known as passive phased array, is an antenna in which the beam of radio waves can be electronically steered to point in different directions (that is, a phased array antenna), in which all the ...
(PESA) radars. For a variety of reasons, these were far less susceptible to jamming than radars that had to scan mechanically, and for most uses, these rendered the carcinotron much less effective. Martello's entered service with the RAF as the AMES Type 90 and Type 91 as part of a nationwide system known as Improved UKADGE, replacing the entire Linesman system by 1984.


Description

The High Speed Aerial (HSA) was designed to have partial vertical focussing to allow it to scan to high elevation angles. During normal reception, a series of feed horns allowed signals from anywhere across the front of the antenna to be received in a pattern that was about 70 degrees wide. This lack of focusing was deliberate, as it meant the two antennas on a baseline did not have to be pointing at the same target at the same time, something that would only be possible if the rough location was already known. Instead, the antennas simply had to be pointing in the same general point on the
compass rose A compass rose or compass star, sometimes called a wind rose or rose of the winds, is a polar coordinates, polar diagram displaying the orientation of the cardinal directions (north, east, south, and west) and their points of the compass, inter ...
, and if a target was anywhere in front of either, their signals would line up in the correlator. As the antenna had a wide acceptance area and its own scanning system, it did not necessarily have to rotate. In some modes, it could be set to one of four fixed angles arranged to cover either side of the baseline between the HSA and its associated Type 85. There were two settings on either side, "near look" and "far look". Alternately, the HSA could rotate in synchronicity with the Type 85 antenna, normally performing a complete 360 degree scan at 4 RPM, or alternately a sector scan at the same angular speed of 24 degrees per second. This meant the radar and PDS both had the same "data rate". During normal operations, the associated Type 85 was continually scanning. When the Type 85 scanned past a jammer, the jammer signal would briefly reach the correlator. As long as the HSA was pointed in the same general direction it would send the same signal to the correlator, and the correlator would output a "match". When a match was seen, the HSA would then use its organ-pipe scanner to rapidly scan horizontally. The narrow beam of the Type 85 painted any single target for only about of a second, and the HSA scanned the entire 70 degree space in front of it during that period. This is the origin of the name "high speed". During the scan, the jammer signal would still be visible to the Type 85, and would also appear in two or three of the feed horns on the HSA. These signals were fed into a bank of correlators. The correlation takes some time, so multiple correlators were needed in order to perform the comparisons in parallel for several of the feed horns at the same time. This was the purpose of storing the outputs in a computer; instead of a correlator for every feed horn, the system used a smaller number arranged in a loop, and as soon as one correlation was complete, its measurement was stored in the computer and then it was used to perform the correlation on the next feed horn. When the scan was complete, this data was sent to a unique "theta-phi" display. The display was drawn by scanning vertically, as opposed to horizontally as in conventional
analogue television Analog television is the original television technology that uses analog signals to transmit video and audio. In an analog television broadcast, the brightness, colors and sound are represented by amplitude, phase and frequency of an analog ...
. Each vertical scan displayed the correlator value measured through one of the feed horns, and then it moved slightly to the right to repeat this for the next feed horn value. The result was an X-Y display with the X coordinate being the angle and the Y coordinate the range. Since the signal would likely be visible in several of the feed horns, as their reception patterns overlapped slightly in the horizontal axis, the target did not appear as a single dot but a "constellation" of closely spaced dots. The operator could control the gain to make the weaker spots disappear, and then estimate the location of the aircraft in the remaining set. They would then use a normal voice telephone link to an operator at the L1 station, who would manually enter the location into the main displays. To aid the conversion from X-Y to a map location, the display added additional vertical lines to divide the display into "sectors" which could then be looked up on a map. Due to the "stacked" vertical beams of the Type 85, height finding was still possible by examining which beams were receiving the jamming signal and which were clear of it.


Notes


References


Citations


Bibliography

* * * {{cite web , url=http://www.radarpages.co.uk/mob/linesman/pd.htm , title=RX12874 – Passive Detection , date= 5 March 2002 , first=Dick , last=Barrett Military radars of the United Kingdom Ground radars Military equipment introduced in the 1960s