Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
![]()
Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In sci.physics Michael A. Terrell wrote:
msg wrote: Spob wrote: snip Would it be possible to build a gizmo that could be surreptitiously aimed at the offending stereo system to fry some crucial components? snip I assume many high power radar site operators have pet stories to tell, but I remember one that deserves a retelling: There was a Merritt Island cop who set up a speed trap on a road perhaps a mile downroad from a powerful range tracking radar station. The operators were not amused with the daily harassment from him and decided to make his life a little more interesting and theirs a little less hassled. Siting the cop's squad car in the telescoping aiming site of the radar dish, one of the operators briefly keyed a pulse train and watched. Soon the car left but returned the next day. Again the operator sited and pulsed the car and again it left. After the third day it did not return. I do not know if the tracking radar and cop's radar gun were on the same band, however I do know that 1MW of microwaves was sufficiently nondiscriminatory at the receiving end to burn out its front end. Regards, Michael Bull****. The antennas rotate, but the elevation is fixed. There is no telescope on any RADAR Antenna, and no way to "Siting the cop's squad car". There are no keying of brief pulses, the system works with a steady stream of pulsed RF, and measuring the reflected signals. I did some RADAR work in the US Army, and there was a pair of 2 MW pulsed RADAR transmitters in our building. You are spreading an urban legend, with enough holes to sink the Titanic (again). If the RADAR equipment in a cruiser WAS damaged, it was because the idiot cop was too close to the RADAR site, and it was a coincidence. Even this is hard to believe, because RADAR sites are usually well inside a fenced area, far from civilian areas, and high enough to clear close in ground clutter. The high gain, highly directional antennas do not radiate enough near field RF to do any damage, unless the cruiser was on very high a hilltop, and less than a 1/4 mile from the RADAR site. US Army Nike had a missle track, target track and a target range radar, all of which were steerable in both azimuth and elevation. Since Nike radars were normally deployed on the highest hill around, the MTR, TTR, and TRR could all be depressed below the horizon. All of them were boresighted and aligned by bolting on the telescope, going to manual control, and aiming them with a box that hung by a strap around your neck at the alignment target about a quarter mile away. We used to regularly break the MP's speed radar at Ft Bliss until the MP's wised up and made sure there was a metal building between them and us. We could wipe them out to about a mile away and jam them a lot farther than that. This was the late 60's. While I was in Korea, a spook detachment set up a listening post down the hill from us. They were a bunch of jerks and ****ed off everyone, so I gave their equipment the same treatment. They moved to the next mountain after they got their gear fixed. Tell me more about your toy radars. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Is it possible to convert an USB wire device to a bluetooth device? | Electronics Repair | |||
Device name? | Metalworking | |||
Anybody actually seen this new safety device? | Woodworking | |||
Factory built home vs. traditional site built home | Home Ownership | |||
Shop Built Wide belt sander vs Shop Built Drum sander....Whats easyer to make. Im no engineer. | Woodworking |