Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Yes, I am very aware of that after standing on the deck fishing. Forgot
about the radar, and got a headace. It got away when I switched it off. thanks "SB" skrev i melding e.rogers.com... I work on weather radars that have up to 250kiloWatts out. this is a peak value. with the pulse widths we use it's actually only an average of 120Watts or so out. Now, don't think that since you have 200W speakers and are safe standing in front of them, that you are safe sitting in front of your 20W (average) radar. Just a note for safety...exposure times and all..... "Aron Tvedt" wrote in message ... There is something I dont understand about radars. I have a JRC 1500 radar (16 miles), in according to the manual, the antenna is supposed to send out a radarbeam of 2000 watt. My engines (yanmar 4lha htp) generator produses 12v 80A (1120watt). I dont use the radar all the time, but if I did, would the engine be able to produse enough power to my batteries? Some experienced sailors say my radar cannot have an effect of 2000watt. It is the same effect of an electical owen. |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Do these little guys use magnetrons??
not much for power....would this use some sort of tube?? "Larry W4CSC" wrote in message ... The 2KW is PEAK power, only during the very short radar pulse. The average power is very low because the time in between pulses is very long, in comparison to the pulse. If you measure the DC power applied to the radar, you'll only get a few amps of DC power because of this. Power is stored in what is called a "pulse forming network" so the magnetron has a charged source of power to pull the big pulse of current from. This is why there are no big DC cables going up the mast to power it. The electronics fires the stored power through the magnetron, very quickly, producing a very narrow pulse time, which is why you can see that bouy so close to the boat. You'll have no problem powering even the 8KW radar from any alternator...... On Sun, 29 Feb 2004 10:44:53 +0100, "Aron Tvedt" wrote: There is something I dont understand about radars. I have a JRC 1500 radar (16 miles), in according to the manual, the antenna is supposed to send out a radarbeam of 2000 watt. My engines (yanmar 4lha htp) generator produses 12v 80A (1120watt). I dont use the radar all the time, but if I did, would the engine be able to produse enough power to my batteries? Some experienced sailors say my radar cannot have an effect of 2000watt. It is the same effect of an electical owen. Larry W4CSC No, no, Scotty! I said, "Beam me a wrench.", not a WENCH! Kirk Out..... |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
They use magnetrons in 1 KW to 10 KW range, depending on unit design.
Doug K7ABX "SB" wrote in message le.rogers.com... Do these little guys use magnetrons?? not much for power....would this use some sort of tube?? |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 01 Mar 2004 23:01:21 GMT, "SB" wrote:
Do these little guys use magnetrons?? not much for power....would this use some sort of tube?? Yes, they do. Magnetrons are both oscillator and amplifier and frequency controller. They are extremely efficient at putting out a very narrow pulse of very high powered RF energy. Any FAA long-range radar site has another similar device on S-Band, the amplitron. It takes the powerful pulse of the magentron and amplifies it into the megawatt range! The magnetron in our 2KW Raymarine is a tiny little thing with a tiny little filament to hold down the power drain. Every microwave oven in the world has a magnetron firing 50 to 60 times per second into its cooking cavity. They are also dirt cheap, which is why the marine industry loves them....(c; Larry W4CSC No, no, Scotty! I said, "Beam me a wrench.", not a WENCH! Kirk Out..... |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
What 'primes' the magnetron on these systems?
A maggie will do the work at ampin up the input and all, but I thought there was a certain threshold you had to achieve before it could to it's work properly. In some of our old systems we used thyrtrons to bring up the power a bit (volts/current?? not sure) and then the maggie would jack it up and kick it out. The cavity of our maggies can be adjusted for the frequency you are putting out, but we also have some external compnents that assist with that and with the firing rate. We've gone completely solid state in a black box...so that's a s much as I know about it!! haha Fun stuff though! I used to have to shave my head....might be age...or exposure...but if I keep working on these I won't have to anymore. OH, and my tan as gotten a lot better! j/k "Larry W4CSC" wrote in message ... On Mon, 01 Mar 2004 23:01:21 GMT, "SB" wrote: Do these little guys use magnetrons?? not much for power....would this use some sort of tube?? Yes, they do. Magnetrons are both oscillator and amplifier and frequency controller. They are extremely efficient at putting out a very narrow pulse of very high powered RF energy. Any FAA long-range radar site has another similar device on S-Band, the amplitron. It takes the powerful pulse of the magentron and amplifies it into the megawatt range! The magnetron in our 2KW Raymarine is a tiny little thing with a tiny little filament to hold down the power drain. Every microwave oven in the world has a magnetron firing 50 to 60 times per second into its cooking cavity. They are also dirt cheap, which is why the marine industry loves them....(c; Larry W4CSC No, no, Scotty! I said, "Beam me a wrench.", not a WENCH! Kirk Out..... |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article
ogers.com, "SB" wrote: Do these little guys use magnetrons?? not much for power....would this use some sort of tube?? ALL small boat Radars use Magnitrons. Yes, they are a Vacumn tube. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article gers.com,
"SB" wrote: The cavity of our maggies can be adjusted for the frequency you are putting out, but we also have some external compnents that assist with that and with the firing rate. Variable Frequency Magnitorns are not allowed in the Maritime Mobile Radio Service in the USA. All of the Type Accepted Radars in the US use fixed Frequency Magnitrons. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Question:
In the days of yore, did early marine radars ever use klystrons? We used them in (very) early microwave communications systems. They were a bear to keep on frequency, and didn't last long. Maggies are interesting devices. If you've ever torn one apart, it mostly looks like a machined hunk of steel, which in fact it is, and surprisingly small. The magnets account for most of the weight. As to power, I recall that our airborne radar had a peak power output of 2 megaWatts, but the maggie current was only 18 - 20 milliamps. Of course the high voltage was 20 kV. What kind of maggie power supply (voltage & current) is normally found in small marine radars these days? Norm |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
engsol wrote: Question: In the days of yore, did early marine radars ever use klystrons? We used them in (very) early microwave communications systems. They were a bear to keep on frequency, and didn't last long. Maggies are interesting devices. If you've ever torn one apart, it mostly looks like a machined hunk of steel, which in fact it is, and surprisingly small. The magnets account for most of the weight. As to power, I recall that our airborne radar had a peak power output of 2 megaWatts, but the maggie current was only 18 - 20 milliamps. Of course the high voltage was 20 kV. What kind of maggie power supply (voltage & current) is normally found in small marine radars these days? Norm Back before Gunn Diode LO's, all radars used Klystrons as Receiver LO's. All the early Commercial Radars that came on the market after WWII used Klystrons as receiver LO's. 2K25 comes to mind but don't hold me to that. Now days the radar receivers use LNA/MMIC's for FrontEnds with intergrile solidstate LO's driving Double Balanced Active Mixers. This is why Radars these days can see 48 and 72 miles with less than 6Kw Maggies. Back in the bad old days it took 20 and sometimes 40Kw to see out 72 miles, because the receivers were KLystron feed Crystal Diode Mixers with Sky High Noise Figures. Receivers have become orders of Magnitude more sensitive than 2nd and 3rd generation receivers of the 70's and 80's. Your Tax dollars at work. (US MIlitary Electronics Development Dollars) V and A for common Maggies are in the 2Kv- 3Kv range with peak currents of an amp, and up to 2 amps PEAK. This all compes from the Pulse Forming Network that is usually feed by a switching powersupply up in the T/R Pan that runs on 10-40 VDC Ships Mains, or some such variation of Power supply for the Radar. 9M502 and 9M503 come to mind for common 3-5 Kw maggies, with the old 2J42 for the 9 - 10 Kw versions. Haven't kept up on the state of the art for the last 7 or so years, but the basic's haven't changed all that much in the Tx side of the Antenna Pan. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Newer equipment having to meet tighter European spurious emission
requirements in the past couple years have seen some fightening of manufacturers tolerance on magnetrons or in some cases, even requiring equipment manufacturers to upgrade current model with new magnetrons, circulators, limiters, etc. Doug K7ABX "Bruce in Alaska" wrote in message ... In article , engsol wrote: Question: In the days of yore, did early marine radars ever use klystrons? We used them in (very) early microwave communications systems. They were a bear to keep on frequency, and didn't last long. Maggies are interesting devices. If you've ever torn one apart, it mostly looks like a machined hunk of steel, which in fact it is, and surprisingly small. The magnets account for most of the weight. As to power, I recall that our airborne radar had a peak power output of 2 megaWatts, but the maggie current was only 18 - 20 milliamps. Of course the high voltage was 20 kV. What kind of maggie power supply (voltage & current) is normally found in small marine radars these days? Norm Back before Gunn Diode LO's, all radars used Klystrons as Receiver LO's. All the early Commercial Radars that came on the market after WWII used Klystrons as receiver LO's. 2K25 comes to mind but don't hold me to that. Now days the radar receivers use LNA/MMIC's for FrontEnds with intergrile solidstate LO's driving Double Balanced Active Mixers. This is why Radars these days can see 48 and 72 miles with less than 6Kw Maggies. Back in the bad old days it took 20 and sometimes 40Kw to see out 72 miles, because the receivers were KLystron feed Crystal Diode Mixers with Sky High Noise Figures. Receivers have become orders of Magnitude more sensitive than 2nd and 3rd generation receivers of the 70's and 80's. Your Tax dollars at work. (US MIlitary Electronics Development Dollars) V and A for common Maggies are in the 2Kv- 3Kv range with peak currents of an amp, and up to 2 amps PEAK. This all compes from the Pulse Forming Network that is usually feed by a switching powersupply up in the T/R Pan that runs on 10-40 VDC Ships Mains, or some such variation of Power supply for the Radar. 9M502 and 9M503 come to mind for common 3-5 Kw maggies, with the old 2J42 for the 9 - 10 Kw versions. Haven't kept up on the state of the art for the last 7 or so years, but the basic's haven't changed all that much in the Tx side of the Antenna Pan. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|