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AN/SPS-49

 
Wikipedia: AN/SPS-49
AN/SPS-49
SPS-49 Air Search Radar antenna.jpg
Country of origin United States
Introduced 1975
Number built 200+
Type 2D Air-search
Frequency L band 850–942 MHz
Range 250 nmi (460 km)
Altitude up to 150,000 ft
(45,720 m)
Diameter 24 ft (7.3 m) × 14 ft 3 in
(7.3 m × 4.3 m)
Azimuth 0-360°
Precision ­0.03 nmi range
0.5 deg azimuth (SPS-49(V)5)

The AN/SPS-49 is a United States Navy two-dimensional, long range air search radar built by Raytheon that is capable of providing contact bearing and range. The radar is also used by several other countries, such as Australia, Canada, Spain, Poland and Taiwan aboard Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates and Canadian Halifax-class frigates.

Contents

Operation

First tested in 1965 aboard USS Gyatt (DD-712) and introduced in 1975, the SPS-49 serves as a primary air-search radar aboard numerous ships world wide. It is also serves in a complementary role aboard Aegis cruisers with the AN/SPY-1. It is an L band radar operating in the 850–942 MHz band and has a range of 250 nautical miles (460 km). The orange-peel parabolic shape of the antenna creates a narrow 3.3° beam reducing the probability of detection or jamming. It is also capable of rotating at 6 rpm for long range mode or 12 rpm in short range mode.[1] To guard against incoming missiles, default operation of the AN/SPS-49A(V)1 is at 12 rpm, in order to provide more frequent scans. The SPS-49A is capable of full-range detection in either 6 or 12 rpm modes.

Variants

Source:[1]

  • AN/SPS-49A(V)1 - Developed in the mid 1990s. Added radial speed determination on each target, each scan. Improved clutter rejection

References

See also

External links


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