Spo-10

No, Dev said SPO10 can’t detect HPRF, which is a jibber jabber, for “I don’t have a clue”.
The point…SPO10 is a H-J band RWR and can pickup any PRF within that freq. range.
If CW is outta that range, fine, but atm SPO10 can’t pickup SRC, nor TRK from ordinary I band radar like APG59.

Funnily enough, that same ingame SPO10 doesn’t have any problems picking up 1RL144 PD J band radar from 2S6 in SRC and TRK modes.

And Guess what Sparrows use for guidance? Its only specific combinations of Late Sparrows(AIM-7F and later) and airframes(F-16C ,F-15 & F-18) that use HPRF, they otherwise use dedicated (FM)CW illuminators.


F-16 AIM-7 timeline

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What he means: SPO-10 cant specific the HPRF signal in received signal so it cant detect launch
What you thought: SPO-10 could receive HPRF signal so it could detect launch, but it’s false because it dont know what it receive is HPRF, CW or normal lock

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Fine, but even if CW is outside SPO10’s band, I still need to be alert when F-4S starts pinging me and particularly tracking with its I band APG59 radar.

I have no clue what he meant, just what he wrote.
My report was submitted regarding GJ’s decision to make Doppler radars not register on SPO10 and some other RWRs.

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Gaijin seem to have information to the centaury:

SPO-10 doesn’t detect radar signals with PRF lower than 800 Hz and higher than 8000 Hz, which means that it can’t detect MPRF and HPRF pulse-doppler signals.

The DCS devs also seem to have come to the same conclusion:

  • Improved: SPO-10 RWR remodelling.
    • Each channel is now processed separately.
    • Detection based on radiation pattern of the antennas, power density of the incoming radiation and sensitivity of the detectors. The detection range will change depending on relative bearing and is not a linear function of emitting radar’s range anymore.
    • Detection limited to radar sources within the operational frequency range of the system (7.5 to 16.6 GHz carrier frequency, 740-8000Hz PRF).

Have you got anything to say the PRF range extends above 8,000 Hz?

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I’ve posted it above.
Mig21Bis Pilot’s manual clearly states the SPO10 picks up SRC and TRK, from an airborne H-J band radar, which commonly occur at MPRF/HPRF.
PRF can’t be higher than radar’s freq. (which is within SPO10’s op. bandwidth), so I’d really love to hear from those who “concluded” anything, how does the product of their “concluding” work.

Obviously, GJ copied figures from ED and it would be interesting to know where they come up with those figures for a PRF range.

The F-4J’s radar operates at a PRF of 300,000 Hz, which is well above the 8,000 Hz PRF the SPO-10 can apparently detect.

I don’t know where they got the performance figures from, but it was certainly not uncommon for early RWRs to be incapable of detecting pulse doppler emissions, so it seems entirely believable.

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I doubt it since PRF of 300kHz wouldn’t give the radar more than 500m of range.
But still, do you have any source for that SPO10’s PRF “range”, other than what some dudes “concluded” on DCS forum?


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Thanks for sharing this.

Well that confirms it then. The maximum PRF the SPO-10 can detect is 8,000 Hz, which means there is no way it can detect HPRF radars (which are by definition all over 30,000 Hz).

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Here is the F-4J Weapons System manual:
image

The Pulse Repetition Interval (PRI) is 3.3 microseconds (0.0000033 seconds). The formula for PRF is:

PRF = 1/PRI

So:

PRF = 1/0.0000033
PRF = 303,030Hz

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But this is just a velocity search.
You don’t get to fix the contact position, because the radar returns ambiguous range.
In 300kHz PRF, you get mere 500m of unambiguous range.
Everything farther is ambiguous range.
So, the most common ACM mode range is about 20km, which is about 8kHz PRF.
If you wanna scan further, you need to decrease PRF even further.

So you see, if you wanna launch you need to come down to SPO10’s PRF range, especially when it comes to SARH, because of fusing…at least with these radars.

Thx, now all makes sense.

Velocity search is the only pulse-doppler search mode the F-4J’s radar has.

The F-4J’s radar does not obtain target range during tracking by lowering the PRF, it would cease to be a HPRF radar if it did that. It achieves ranging by modulating the HPRF waveform:
image

And that modulation is only 85 Hz (SPO-10 won’t be detecting it - not that it would be able to even if it were higher):

image

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Can you upload that manual?

So, what does the manual say about the max. range in that mode, at that PRF?

Ranges;

Spoiler

Corresponding PRF numbers and Hz

Spoiler

Thx, but I meant range for target distance reading.

Well that is the range info for track based on the PRF

Target is between 17.5nm to 26.5nm PRF 3 & 4 are used with a 85Hz modulation for ranging. The same 85Hz modulation appears to be used for any PD track. This allows for a velocity calculation and ranging. When in search there is no modulation and its only able to provide velocity and azimuth.

Either way, all of these PRF’s are well outside the SPO-10’s ability to detect.

Yeah, well, what I’m trying to determine the track accuracy, since apparently FM ranging isn’t actually ranging, but a range approximation.

Several U.S. fighters use a technique
called linear-FM ranging, where the PRF remains constant and
radio frequency is swept linearly upward. A crude range
estimate is then determined by comparison of the transmitted
and received RF.
Maximizing noise-limited detection performance in medium PFR radars by optimizing PFR visibility | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Now, there’s a very interesting posting by the guy who claims to have been working on APG59s in F4J/S.
He mentions PD freq. of 40 usec, which corresponds to 6kHz PRF and a tracking range of 25km.
So, anything beyond 25km is of unambiguous range and the plane probably displayed VS tracks.

This is more appropriate for my Aim7 thread, but is connected.

Well, he got some of it right. Both short pulse and chirp were triggered by a 0.65 uSec pulse; however in Chirp mode, the 0.65 uSec pulse was run through the delay line (basically just a coil that was grounded at one end) resulting in the transmitter firing for about 65 uSec. The received pulse was run back through that same exact delay line for pulse compression. It wasn’t perfect; the compressed pulse was 0.8 uSec wide - but it was a heck of a lot stronger than the return from short pulse would’ve been. Best resolution was somewhere around 150-200 feet - but when you’re lobbing a missile at someone, that’s close enough

So, this is how the PD actually worked and the big reason for the abysmal Pk of the Aim7.

There’s more to read here, but I didn’t have time to, so we’ll see what’s going on in more detail.

Also, SPO10 can physically pick up any PRF from its op. band. That’s beyond the discussion.
The 1-8kHz filter is, probably, just set to avoid being triggered by an iPhone, or whatever, but filters can be removed and changed depending on the situation.