Radar Observation; General; Minimum And Maximum Ranges - Furuno FAR-2107(-BB) Operator's Manual

Far-2807 series; far-2107 series; far-2107-bb series
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2.

RADAR OBSERVATION

2.1

General

2.1.1

Minimum and maximum ranges

Minimum range
The minimum range is defined by the shortest distance at which, using a scale of
1.5 or 0.75 nm, a target having an echoing area of 10 m
from the point representing the antenna position.
It is mainly dependent on the pulselength, antenna height, and signal processing
such as main bang reduction and digital quantization. It is a good practice to use
a shorter range scale as far as it gives favorable definition or clarity of picture.
The IMO Resolution MSC.192(79) requires the minimum range to be less than
40 m, respectively. This series of radars satisfy this requirement.
Maximum range
The maximum detecting range of the radar, Rmax, varies considerably
depending on several factors such as the height of the antenna above the
waterline, the height of the target above the sea, the size, shape and material of
the target, and the atmospheric conditions.
Under normal atmospheric conditions, the maximum range is equal to the radar
horizon or a little shorter. The radar horizon is longer than the optical one by
about 6% because of the diffraction property of the radar signal. The Rmax is
given in the following equation.
R
= 2.2 x ( h1 + h2 )
max
where Rmax:
h1: antenna height (m)
h2 : target height (m)
For example, if the height of the antenna above the waterline is 9 meters and the
height of the target is 16 meters, the maximum radar range is;
R
= 2.2 x ( 9 + 16 ) = 2.2 x (3 + 4) = 15.4 nm
max
It should be noted that the detection range is reduced by precipitation (which
absorbs the radar signal).
radar horizon (nautical miles)
Radar horizon
Optical horizon
2
is still shown separate
2-1

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