![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The RDR-160 has a 160 mile setting but the beam is huge at anything over 40
miles. At 40 miles it is something like 40,000 feet tall. So anything in the range is going to get hit and might return. So if you try to use tilt for identifying anything much beyond 40 miles (next settings are 80, 120 and 160) you are painting with a very big brush, and with limited power (compared to big iron). The joys of 10 or 12 inch antennas. With that said it is still nice to know what is out there are 40 miles or so. I just wish it painted a better picture further out. "pac plyer" wrote in message om... "Richard Kaplan" wrote Strikefinder or Stormscope would be far more useful than radar in a single-engine plane. My RDR-160 radar was the worst investment I ever made in my plane. CBAV is far more useful, and certainly the newer portable and panel-mount datalink systems seem to have the potential to beat CBAV. Saying my radar has a range of 160 miles is a cruel joke; its range is really only 40-50 miles, and even then it only works that far out if there is a strong storm around. No piston airplane has the speed or altitude capability to pentrate a line of thunderstorms and thus any piston plane can get boxed in if a hole closes in from behind while trying to use radar to find "holes" in storms. I bet your Radar does have a 160 mile range. What altitude were you at? Because of the curvature of the earth that set's going to attenuate badly down low. You probably can't use the 160 range effectively till you get up much higher like over 10,000AGL. Even jets have to step the range down as they get lower. Bob's right: using the set correctly is quite an art. Many copilots I've flown with can't do it right. For some reason, radar training is kind of a lost art. Best Regards, pacplyer |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | November 9th 04 03:47 PM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | November 1st 04 06:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | May 1st 04 08:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | January 1st 04 06:27 AM |
rec.aviation.aerobatics FAQ | Dr. Guenther Eichhorn | Aerobatics | 0 | November 1st 03 06:27 AM |