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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. |
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#82
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#83
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#84
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Uncle Al posted to sci.electronics.design:
Spob wrote: Sitting at a gas station as some backwards baseball cap and saggass britches wearing kid parks in the fire zone in front of the store with some fukdamuhfukinniggahbeyotch crap blasting out of his truck for everyone's entertainment, got me to thinking. Would it be possible to build a gizmo that could be surreptitiously aimed at the offending stereo system to fry some crucial components? It would have to be able to do it on a pretty localized basis without causing damage to the person aiming the gizmo or innocent bystanders or their car's electronics. Whether it would fry any additional components of said target punk's car isn't of great concern. Call it The Rapper Zapper. Just wonderin'. Big woofers, small testicles. You'd be arrested for malicious destruction of property. -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2 Maybe. They would have to find the device, prove it was mine, and that it was being operated at that time. If the first is intractable, the following are harder. |
#85
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In sci.physics Fred Bloggs wrote:
wrote: TRR - Target range radar; tracked the target in range in ECM, frequency agile to defeat ECM, elevation and azimuth provided by the ECM source How exactly did that mode work, tracking target range but using EW interference for az/el? How could you not know your az/el if you're getting detections from your pulse? The TRR was slaved in azimuth and elevation to the TTR. The TTR had the required hardware to track in azimuth and elevation. When jammed, the TTR tracked the jamming source. The TRR provided only range information. The TTR was X band. The TRR was Ku band and frequency agile to get around the jamming. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#86
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In sci.physics Arny Krueger wrote:
wrote in message ... In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 20:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 16:25:02 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: OK, you're not talking about a radar, you're talking about an EMP weapon. It's apparently both. Plus it seems to be able to blast all available data to a satellite so headquarters has a full 3D view of the entire theatre, everything all the planes and drones can see. I find a combined radar/weapon in something the size of a fighter a little hard to believe. So google it and believe what you will. The military reference says that they power and store the energy beam equipment with resources that are used for VTOL hardware in other models. Little problems like how do you store energy on the order of hundreds of megawatts and how do you transfer it to the RF generators in nanoseconds. Wires have inductance. Wires have less inductance if they are really short. No ****? Each of the tiles apparently has local capacitive energy storage and a a laser-triggered switch that dumps the cap energy into the antenna, probably as a UWB ringing impulse. I've seen a blurred pic of the BAE switch, and it looks like a small strip of amorphous material (possibly doped diamond?) on a ceramic substrate. High peak power laser-triggered semiconductor switches have been around for a decade at least. 10KV x 10KA = 100 MW, not unreasonable if you've got G$ to spend. The capacitor HAS to be local to get around wire inductance. OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Don't know Where do you put the receive antenna(s) if this thing is also a radar? Pulse radars use the same antenna to send and receive. Yeah, but the implication was the little 4 inch dodad was a megawatt source. Now it's a receiver front end too? Matter of fact, where do you put any of this stuff? There isn't that much forward looking surface on a fighter. Put it under a streamlined radome. Not a lot of area there for gigawatts. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#87
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In sci.physics John Larkin wrote:
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#88
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["Followup-To:" header set to sci.electronics.design.]
John Larkin wrote: The array radars on the F-22 and JSF are reported to hit gigawatts peak, and may one day get into the terawatt range. The JSF is reported to hit a lot of things. From the webpage www.jsf.mil: The JSFs advanced airframe, autonomic logistics, avionics, propulsion systems, stealth, and firepower will ensure that the F-35 is the most affordable, lethal, supportable and survivable aircraft ever to be used by so many warfighters across the globe. I've hardly ever read a longer catenation of random attributes. I don't know about the radar, but at least the webpage is a terawatt hot air blower. robert |
#89
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["Followup-To:" header set to sci.electronics.design.]
Spob wrote: Would it be possible to build a gizmo that could be surreptitiously aimed at the offending stereo system to fry some crucial components? At some hacker congress I once saw a proposed device consisting of a satellite dish and the guts of a microwave oven. I dreamed about it while lying awake at night when I lived in an apartment with nothing but a wooden ceiling between a jukebox and my apartment. robert |
#90
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On Sat, 18 Aug 2007 18:05:48 -0700 Spob
wrote in Message id: . com: Sitting at a gas station as some backwards baseball cap and saggass britches wearing kid parks in the fire zone in front of the store with some fukdamuhfukinniggahbeyotch crap blasting out of his truck for everyone's entertainment, got me to thinking. Would it be possible to build a gizmo that could be surreptitiously aimed at the offending stereo system to fry some crucial components? It would have to be able to do it on a pretty localized basis without causing damage to the person aiming the gizmo or innocent bystanders or their car's electronics. Whether it would fry any additional components of said target punk's car isn't of great concern. Call it The Rapper Zapper. Just wonderin'. :-) How about one of these: http://www.betterhomesecurity.com/~S...php?ref=stg800 discharged to the vehicle's antenna? |
#91
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![]() wrote in message ... In sci.physics Fred Bloggs wrote: wrote: TRR - Target range radar; tracked the target in range in ECM, frequency agile to defeat ECM, elevation and azimuth provided by the ECM source How exactly did that mode work, tracking target range but using EW interference for az/el? How could you not know your az/el if you're getting detections from your pulse? The TRR was slaved in azimuth and elevation to the TTR. The TTR had the required hardware to track in azimuth and elevation. When jammed, the TTR tracked the jamming source. Jammers have to behave somewhat suicidally. I've tracked real-world jamming sources and they are very easy to track because they put out one heck of a signal. In Vietnam, our jamming planes were called "Wild Weasels" and were often short-lived. The TRR provided only range information. The TTR was X band. The TRR was Ku band and frequency agile to get around the jamming. In Hawk the TRR was called the ROR, range-only-radar. But the frequencies and the function were the same. In Hawk, range information could be optional, since the missile homed. In Nike, range information was critical, because the missile was a remote controlled airplane of sorts. Hawk was later augmented with optical tracking based on a telescope, a TV camera, and sometime after that, an IR imager. |
#92
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![]() "Fred Bloggs" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: 10.4 * 10**6 * 6 * 10**-6 = 62.4 watts average power. You got to be some kind of genius to do an average power calculation like that, you know that? I could understand if you were really really old like say 67 or mo-) 60. |
#93
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:25:03 GMT, wrote:
In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. Google "uwb transmitter". Good grief. John |
#94
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In sci.physics John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. Google "uwb transmitter". Good grief. A phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control of the emitters to do the beam forming and aiming. How does one do that with a "uwb transmitter"? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#95
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 15:15:02 GMT, wrote:
In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. Google "uwb transmitter". Good grief. A phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control of the emitters to do the beam forming and aiming. How does one do that with a "uwb transmitter"? Timing. John |
#96
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In sci.physics John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 15:15:02 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. Google "uwb transmitter". Good grief. A phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control of the emitters to do the beam forming and aiming. How does one do that with a "uwb transmitter"? Timing. Point totally missed. Which phase (or frequency) of an Ultra Wide Band transmitter do you use? You can't use all of them. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#97
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wrote:
A phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control of the emitters to do the beam forming and aiming. The way most of the phased-array systems I have seen operate is that there is a master clock which drives all of the individual transmitter modules, and each of the modules receives a control signal for a phase modulator, which shifts the output of that module by a preset amount. How this is accomplished in each module varies a lot depending on the speed of control required, the bandwidth required, and the size. When you have a few hundred channels, shrinking each channel in size becomes critical. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#98
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 16:25:02 GMT, wrote:
In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 15:15:02 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. Google "uwb transmitter". Good grief. A phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control of the emitters to do the beam forming and aiming. How does one do that with a "uwb transmitter"? Timing. Point totally missed. Which phase (or frequency) of an Ultra Wide Band transmitter do you use? You can't use all of them. Do you have a PhD in what can't be done? John |
#99
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![]() wrote in message ... In sci.physics Arny Krueger wrote: wrote in message ... In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 20:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 16:25:02 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: OK, you're not talking about a radar, you're talking about an EMP weapon. It's apparently both. Plus it seems to be able to blast all available data to a satellite so headquarters has a full 3D view of the entire theatre, everything all the planes and drones can see. I find a combined radar/weapon in something the size of a fighter a little hard to believe. So google it and believe what you will. The military reference says that they power and store the energy beam equipment with resources that are used for VTOL hardware in other models. Little problems like how do you store energy on the order of hundreds of megawatts and how do you transfer it to the RF generators in nanoseconds. Wires have inductance. Wires have less inductance if they are really short. No ****? Each of the tiles apparently has local capacitive energy storage and a a laser-triggered switch that dumps the cap energy into the antenna, probably as a UWB ringing impulse. I've seen a blurred pic of the BAE switch, and it looks like a small strip of amorphous material (possibly doped diamond?) on a ceramic substrate. High peak power laser-triggered semiconductor switches have been around for a decade at least. 10KV x 10KA = 100 MW, not unreasonable if you've got G$ to spend. The capacitor HAS to be local to get around wire inductance. OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Don't know Where do you put the receive antenna(s) if this thing is also a radar? Pulse radars use the same antenna to send and receive. Yeah, but the implication was the little 4 inch dodad was a megawatt source. Now it's a receiver front end too? Matter of fact, where do you put any of this stuff? There isn't that much forward looking surface on a fighter. Put it under a streamlined radome. Not a lot of area there for gigawatts. Heating of the radome might also be a problem. |
#100
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In sci.physics John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 16:25:02 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 15:15:02 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 04:25:03 GMT, wrote: In sci.physics John Larkin wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:25:02 GMT, wrote: OK, now you have some switched power, what generates the RF? Switched power *is* RF! Ummm, no. Switched power is just switched power. There has to be a microwave RF generator somewhere. Google "uwb transmitter". Good grief. A phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control of the emitters to do the beam forming and aiming. How does one do that with a "uwb transmitter"? Timing. Point totally missed. Which phase (or frequency) of an Ultra Wide Band transmitter do you use? You can't use all of them. Do you have a PhD in what can't be done? No, but I have enough years of experience with RF in general and radar in particular to know building a phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control and you can't do that with an ultra wideband device, which has a bandwidth of 500 Mhz. Such a device may make a great wireless LAN at ranges of tens of yards, but is not the device of choice for building a phased array anything. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#101
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No, but I have enough years of experience with RF in general and radar
in particular to know building a phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control and you can't do that with an ultra wideband device, which has a bandwidth of 500 Mhz. What is the bandwidth of modern radars? I'd expect it to be wide and using spread spectrum tricks to make jaming harder. -- These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's. I hate spam. |
#102
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 06:52:38 -0400, Arny Krueger wrote:
wrote in message In sci.physics Fred Bloggs wrote: wrote: TRR - Target range radar; tracked the target in range in ECM, frequency agile to defeat ECM, elevation and azimuth provided by the ECM source How exactly did that mode work, tracking target range but using EW interference for az/el? How could you not know your az/el if you're getting detections from your pulse? The TRR was slaved in azimuth and elevation to the TTR. The TTR had the required hardware to track in azimuth and elevation. When jammed, the TTR tracked the jamming source. Jammers have to behave somewhat suicidally. I've tracked real-world jamming sources and they are very easy to track because they put out one heck of a signal. In Vietnam, our jamming planes were called "Wild Weasels" and were often short-lived. No, the Wild Weasels were recce. The EWO (Electronic Warfare Officer), ususally the GIB (Guy In Back), had a spectrum-analyzer display, to sniff out the jammers (and maybe even comm.). I don't know exactly what they did with the info, other than evasive maneuvers, but it gave a pretty good idea of the radar environment they were flying into. I'm sure they carried their own jammers, but so did all of the other fighters/bombers. Cheers! Rich |
#103
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 05:47:33 -0400, JW wrote:
On Sat, 18 Aug 2007 18:05:48 -0700 Spob Sitting at a gas station as some backwards baseball cap and saggass britches wearing kid parks in the fire zone in front of the store with some fukdamuhfukinniggahbeyotch crap blasting out of his truck for everyone's entertainment, got me to thinking. Would it be possible to build a gizmo that could be surreptitiously aimed at the offending stereo system to fry some crucial components? It would have to be able to do it on a pretty localized basis without causing damage to the person aiming the gizmo or innocent bystanders or their car's electronics. Whether it would fry any additional components of said target punk's car isn't of great concern. Call it The Rapper Zapper. How about one of these: http://www.betterhomesecurity.com/~S...php?ref=stg800 discharged to the vehicle's antenna? CD players don't have antennas. (antennae?) Thanks, Rich |
#104
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
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![]() Rich Grise wrote: Call it The Rapper Zapper. How about one of these: http://www.betterhomesecurity.com/~S...php?ref=stg800 discharged to the vehicle's antenna? Zappers are great solid state destroyers (transistors make better fuses than fuses) But you have to get close enough to zap the circuit boards. (Work great on Computer mother boards!) CD players don't have antennas. (antennae?) Yes, although every wire in the player is a potential antenna especially for high frequency (radar) EMP. Electronics have antennas. Bugs have antennae! Benj |
#105
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#106
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Rich Grise wrote:
No, the Wild Weasels were recce. The EWO (Electronic Warfare Officer), ususally the GIB (Guy In Back), had a spectrum-analyzer display, to sniff out the jammers (and maybe even comm.). I don't know exactly what they did with the info, other than evasive maneuvers, but it gave a pretty good idea of the radar environment they were flying into. At the time, the Bad Guys only had a limited number of standard radar platforms. So with a spiral antenna and a spectrum analyzer, you could pretty quickly tell what was in the neighborhood from the emission frequency and the rough envelope. And with a directional antenna and a little hunting around, you could pretty quickly localize the direction of the source. So with a pretty limited toolkit, you could tell what the bad guys were (ie. targetting radar, sky search, airborne radar) and where they were. Likewise you could very easily tell a legitimate radar system from a jammer from the spectrum, and the jamming platforms were fairly standardized. Doing this while being shot at is left as an exercise to the student and may not be as easy as identifing spectral envelopes in an air-conditioned laboratory. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#107
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In sci.physics Hal Murray wrote:
No, but I have enough years of experience with RF in general and radar in particular to know building a phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control and you can't do that with an ultra wideband device, which has a bandwidth of 500 Mhz. What is the bandwidth of modern radars? I'd expect it to be wide and using spread spectrum tricks to make jaming harder. Depends on what bandwidth you are talking about. For the instananeous transmitted frequency, narrow. Some military stuff has used frequency hopping since WWII to make it harder to jam. Frequency hopping is a spread spectrum technique and the bandwidth over time is wide. You could make a spread spectrum, phased array radar, but the frequency, phase, and amplitude of all the emitters has to be precisely controlled to form the beam, which implies that for a given pulse, all the emitters are transmitting very close to the same frequency. The next pulse may be hundreds of megahertz away, but that's what processors are for. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#108
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In sci.physics John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 15:41:13 -0500, (Hal Murray) wrote: No, but I have enough years of experience with RF in general and radar in particular to know building a phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control and you can't do that with an ultra wideband device, which has a bandwidth of 500 Mhz. At a minumum! What is the bandwidth of modern radars? I'd expect it to be wide and using spread spectrum tricks to make jaming harder. Spiffy modern radars hop and chirp, both of which broaden the working bandwidth. I would hope so since the techniques have been around for at least a quarter century. With modern signal processing, wider radar bandwidth improves resolution. You can do all sorts of fun stuff with 1000 antennas and a few teraflops of compute power. Narrower pulse widths and good receivers improves resolution. All the major powers - US, Russia, France, Germany, China, Israel, UK - are working on HPM weapons and array radars. The Brits call their projects "Suave" and "Virus." MBDA and BAE are major players. Google "mbda hpm" and "bae hpm", and believe it or don't. A search for "mbda hpm" returns: Your search - "mbda hpm" - did not match any documents. And "bae hpm" returns: SIMPLE = T / file conforms to fits standard BITPIX = 16 / number John You are mixing apples, oranges and cherries. Frequency agile radar, rudimentary spread spectrum, was originally developed in WWII. Phased array radars have been around for decades. And everyone WANTS a death ray, but no one has made a practical one yet. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#109
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![]() Hal Murray wrote: No, but I have enough years of experience with RF in general and radar in particular to know building a phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control and you can't do that with an ultra wideband device, which has a bandwidth of 500 Mhz. What is the bandwidth of modern radars? I'd expect it to be wide and using spread spectrum tricks to make jaming harder. The bandwidth of a radar pulse is determined by the required resolution of the distance. Thus there is generally no point to increase the pulse bandwidth beyond ~100Mhz unless for the very special tasks like a target feature recognition. However the carrier frequency and the spreading code can vary from pulse to pulse. Vladimir Vassilevsky DSP and Mixed Signal Design Consultant http://www.abvolt.com |
#110
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#111
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#112
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wrote:
And everyone WANTS a death ray, but no one has made a practical one yet. There are plenty of commercial death rays in the 54-72 MC and 76-88 MC bands. They don't cause death directly, but transmissions on these frequencies can cause severe brain damage even at low levels when demodulated and viewed. A number of studies have shown long-term exposure to cause all sorts of problems in children. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#113
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
wrote: And everyone WANTS a death ray, but no one has made a practical one yet. There are plenty of commercial death rays in the 54-72 MC and 76-88 MC bands. They don't cause death directly, but transmissions on these frequencies can cause severe brain damage even at low levels when demodulated and viewed. A number of studies have shown long-term exposure to cause all sorts of problems in children. --scott AIUI they are termed "brain-death rays" Cheers Terry |
#114
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In sci.physics John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 23:05:03 GMT, wrote: All the major powers - US, Russia, France, Germany, China, Israel, UK - are working on HPM weapons and array radars. The Brits call their projects "Suave" and "Virus." MBDA and BAE are major players. Google "mbda hpm" and "bae hpm", and believe it or don't. A search for "mbda hpm" returns: Your search - "mbda hpm" - did not match any documents. And "bae hpm" returns: SIMPLE = T / file conforms to fits standard BITPIX = 16 / number Don't type the quote marks. Geez. Then don't say Google "mbda hpm" and "bae hpm". And if I don't use quotes, will I get information on phased array radars, phased array death rays, or phased array, spread spectrum, death ray radars? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#115
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![]() wrote: And if I don't use quotes, will I get information on phased array radars, phased array death rays, or phased array, spread spectrum, death ray radars? http://www.mondovista.com/microwave.html Vladimir Vassilevsky DSP and Mixed Signal Design Consultant http://www.abvolt.com |
#116
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
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In sci.physics Vladimir Vassilevsky wrote:
wrote: And if I don't use quotes, will I get information on phased array radars, phased array death rays, or phased array, spread spectrum, death ray radars? http://www.mondovista.com/microwave.html Vladimir Vassilevsky DSP and Mixed Signal Design Consultant http://www.abvolt.com Not a problem if you buy my aluminum foil long johns. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#117
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
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![]() "John Larkin" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 15:41:13 -0500, (Hal Murray) wrote: No, but I have enough years of experience with RF in general and radar in particular to know building a phased array requires precise phase (or frequency) control and you can't do that with an ultra wideband device, which has a bandwidth of 500 Mhz. At a minumum! What is the bandwidth of modern radars? I'd expect it to be wide and using spread spectrum tricks to make jaming harder. Spiffy modern radars hop and chirp, both of which broaden the working bandwidth. With modern signal processing, wider radar bandwidth improves resolution. You can do all sorts of fun stuff with 1000 antennas and a few teraflops of compute power. All the major powers - US, Russia, France, Germany, China, Israel, UK - are working on HPM weapons and array radars. The Brits call their projects "Suave" and "Virus." MBDA and BAE are major players. Google "mbda hpm" and "bae hpm", and believe it or don't. John It seems to me, that with modern electronics and information technology, that a high resolution, handheld, RADAR system is possible. You could quasi-randomly modulate (Variable transmit and listen periods), a solid state microwave oscillator (Gunn Diode) with a digital code with good correlation properties (Gold Code), cross-correlate the echoes received when in the listen mode with the Gold Code, then cross-correlate the correlations from the echoes with stored geo-patterns downloaded from a Google-Earth like data base covering the area of operation, compare adjacent (In time) echo returns to spot moving targets, then present the pattern on a small, solid state, color display that shows the Google-Earth like picture of the area, with super-imposed moving targets. One would not need a directional antenna, nor high power for such a device, but it would be necessary to sweep the device around to build up a good correlation of the area as one's body and other things would block the signals and, even though the Google-Earth like picture, and the location of the RADAR would still be valid, but blocked moving targets would not be detected. Note that if a map of the area of operation is downloaded into the system, and a set of times from the radar to fixed targets is compared to the map, one could quickly correlate the map with the echoes and determine where one is. With such a device, one could move around, and see where they were on a moving Google-Earth-like picture, and see the moving targets about them, perhaps even colored and shaped by the RADAR signatures of the targets. (People, cars, tanks, trains, an incoming missle, etc.) Note that for many situations that such a device could replace GPS. Just like GPS, after the device determines where one is, it would be able to compute changes in position quickly. Hey maybe, I should patent this device? As I mentioned in old posts, I used "Data Mining" back in the 1980's in my businesses and applied for a patent on "Data Mining" just when they began to allow software to be patented, but I decided not to complicate my life, and didn't complete the patent. In other words, if you want to commercialize this idea for non-military applications, go for it. As any entrepreneur knows, ideas are a dime a dozen, and what requires blood, sweat and tears is getting an idea to the marketplace. The bottom line is, no one should be able to hold progress hostage with a patent, that is obvious to many, as the state of the art exposes new approaches. -- Tom Potter *** Time Magazine Person of the Year 2006 *** *** May 2007 Anti-Bigot Award *** http://home.earthlink.net/~tdp http://tdp1001.googlepages.com/home http://no-turtles.com http://www.frappr.com/tompotter http://spaces.msn.com/tdp1001 http://www.flickr.com/photos/tom-potter http://tom-potter.blogspot.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#118
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 21:03:21 GMT Rich Grise wrote in
Message id: : On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 05:47:33 -0400, JW wrote: On Sat, 18 Aug 2007 18:05:48 -0700 Spob Sitting at a gas station as some backwards baseball cap and saggass britches wearing kid parks in the fire zone in front of the store with some fukdamuhfukinniggahbeyotch crap blasting out of his truck for everyone's entertainment, got me to thinking. Would it be possible to build a gizmo that could be surreptitiously aimed at the offending stereo system to fry some crucial components? It would have to be able to do it on a pretty localized basis without causing damage to the person aiming the gizmo or innocent bystanders or their car's electronics. Whether it would fry any additional components of said target punk's car isn't of great concern. Call it The Rapper Zapper. How about one of these: http://www.betterhomesecurity.com/~S...php?ref=stg800 discharged to the vehicle's antenna? CD players don't have antennas. (antennae?) I would assume that an automotive CD player would also be equipped with an AM/FM tuner, wouldn't you? The OP just mentions a "stereo", anyway. |
#119
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Fred Bloggs" wrote in message ... Frequency agile Ku band transmission? What kind of tube did they use for that? Klystrons and Magnetrons can be mechanically tuned over a limited range. Making the receivers track the transmitters is a bigger problem. Wondering why the Ku band could not just take a handoff and do the tracking on its own, must not have been a stable track. The jamming equipment I worked against was pretty limited - it seemed to only jam one band at a time. After all, it was in a fighter/bomber (F4) not a B-52. As long as my HIPIR didn't try to obtain ranging information, the jammer usualy just enhanced my radar's target tracking accuracy. Seriously, a target could be kinda marginal for tracking due to extreme range, but when he turned on his jammer the tracking often tightened right up. His counter for that was to try to AM his signal close to the rotational speed of the rotating scanner, but as a rule that was not very effective. It is possible that his jammer was optimized for a scanner that ran faster or slower. Since jamming usually *enhanced* HIPIR tracking, making the ROR track for itself would like going backwards. Furthermore, once you had even a guess at the target's range, a homing missle had a good chance of getting to the target. Range info was most important for knowing when the target was in range. Range did go into the lead angle calculations for optimizing the intercept, but it was a smaller part of the solution. What kind of cheap ill-begotten antenna gets you less angular resolution at Ku band than X-band? A really small one, or one with a rough surface, but that wasn't the problem. Ku band is appreciably more sensitive to problems with rain and snow, not that X band isn't also affected by them. But weather is less of a problem in the X band. Look at how satellite TV suffers with heavy weather. |
#120
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics,rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Laurence Payne" NOSPAMlpayne1ATdsl.pipex.com wrote in message ... Call it The Rapper Zapper. I'm picturing a device that would hurl a small projectile, possibly made of lead (for maximum mass and small size). A guiding tube would allow accurate aiming. Motive power might be a small controlled explosion? This could cause considerable damage in a strictly localised area. Ah yes, I believe some people have designed a gadget along those very lines and called them "guns" Of course, the possbilities for misuse would make such a device illegal, or at least subject to strict control, in any civilised society. That rules out the USA then. Phildo |
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