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Page Title: Chapter 1 Introduction to Basic Radar
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Electronics Technician Volume 4-Radar Systems
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RANGE/BEARING/ALTITUDE

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO BASIC RADAR The  Navy  Electricity  and  Electronics  Training Series (NEETS) modules, especially module 18,  Radar Principles,  provide information that is basic to your understanding of this volume. This volume will discuss radar and radar systems as you may encounter them as an  Electronics  Technician  at  your  command.  You should  refer  to  NEETS  module  18  and  Electronics Installation  and  Maintenance  Book  (EIMB),  Radar  and Electronic Circuits,  on a regular basis to ensure that you have a complete understanding of the subject matter covered in this volume. As an Electronics Technician, Second Class, and possible  work  center  supervisor,  you  must  understand the  basic  radar  principles  and  safety  requirements  for radar maintenance. However, due to luck of the draw, your  first  assignment  may  not  afford  you  exposure  to radar systems. Our intention with this volume is NOT to teach you every radar system the Navy uses, but simply to familiarize you with the radars and their general  maintenance  principles. You  will  be  able  to  identify  the  equipment requirements  and  general  operation  of  the  three  basic radar  systems  covered  in  chapter  1.  You’ll  become familiar with the nomenclature of specific radars used in the Navy today as we discuss them in chapter 2. Then, armed with all that knowledge you will easily grasp the system  concepts  addressed  in  chapter  3.  And  before  you go out to tackle the radar world, chapter 4 will give you necessary   safety   information   specific   to   radar maintenance. When you arrive at your next command as a second class  with  work  center  responsibilities  for  a  radar maintenance shop, you will be ready. BASIC  RADAR  CONCEPTS The term radar is an acronym made up of the words radio, detection,  and ranging.  It refers to electronic equipment that detects the presence, direction, height, and   distance   of   objects   by   using   reflected electromagnetic    energy. The   frequency   of electromagnetic energy used for radar is unaffected by darkness and also penetrates weather. This permits radar systems to determine the position of ships, planes, and land masses that are invisible to the naked eye because  of  distance,  darkness,  or  weather. Radar systems provide only a limited field of view and require reference coordinate systems to define the positions  of  the  detected  objects.  Radar  surface  angular measurements  are  normally  made  in  a  clockwise direction from  TRUE NORTH, as shown in figure 1-1, or from the heading line of a ship or aircraft. The actual radar  location  is  the  center  of  this  coordinate  system. Figure 1-1 contains the basic terms that you need to know to understand the coordinate system. Those terms are  defined  in  the  following  paragraph. The  surface  of  the  earth  is  represented  by  an imaginary flat plane, known as the HORIZONTAL PLANE, which is tangent (or parallel) to the earth’s surface at that location. All angles in the up direction are measured in a secondary imaginary plane, known as the VERTICAL PLANE,  which is perpendicular to the horizontal plane. The line from the radar set directly to the object is referred to as the  LINE OF SIGHT (LOS). The length of this line is called RANGE. The angle Figure  1-1.—Radar  reference  coordinates. 1-1

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