This is your claim. Not the manufacturer’s.
That source is from 1999. Did Mode 3 even exist then?
Not under the name Mode 3 for sure.
If you’re going to keep arguing in bad faith I will need to summon the FM’s.
Is he genuinely not a native english speaker or has the reading comprehension of middle schoolers actually fallen this much???
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I see the French supremacy everyone else is technologically behind us person is here misunderstanding things again
For what its worth, I didnt bother flagging your low effort insult xD
I would suggest the topic switches back to not being a mud slinging contest and back to matters of fact.
@Mulatu_Astatke dispute this with a like for like primary source material.
From Sagem:
3D target models developed within the framework of air-to-ground for “complex outdoor scenes”.
“valid and non-valid targets”… so like whether it’s a tree or a tank?
But what is their use. The brochure STATES IN BOLD FONT that the algorythm is used for facilities.
Those models might as well be used as example of thing the missile is no supposed to target, or if concentration of look alike targets is hight, there is a chance said facility is its target.
No as per the brochure and the NATO definition of terms it does “identification”, again we don’t need to be English masters here, the same paper outlines the definition of those terms.
You can see the decoy lacks the red cross marking it as target, and the rests starts getting compared to the database
But that paper only mentions target classification…
So IR only for the ships? Interesting
The Japanese GCS IR guidance kits were refused to be added because it couldn’t be proven the IR seeker could track ground targets, do Hammers have a document specifically saying the IR can track ground targets?
Right which is then furthered by the manufacturer claiming “identification”.
Let me help you here;
So you see the paper is in discussion of SAR imagery and its development, it is talking in reference to Brimstone (would be wild to mention in a SAR paper when it can’t do it)?
And yes it turns out you can iteratively improve on something.
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