AN/SPS-49
AN/SPS-49 on USS Abraham Lincoln | |
Country of origin | United States |
---|---|
Introduced | 1975 |
Number built | 200+ |
Type | 2D Air-search |
Frequency | L band 851–942 MHz |
Range | 3 nmi (5.6 km) to 256 nmi (474 km) (AN/SPS-49A(V)1) |
Altitude |
up to 150,000 ft (45,720 m) |
Diameter |
24 ft (7.3 m) × 14 ft 3 in (7.3 m × 4.3 m) |
Azimuth | 0 to 360° |
Precision |
1/16 nmi range 0.5 deg azimuth (SPS-49A(V)1) |
Power | 360 kW peak, 13 kW average (AN/SPS-49A(V)1) |
The AN/SPS-49 is a United States Navy two-dimensional, long range air search radar built by Raytheon that can provide contact bearing and range. It is a primary air-search radar for numerous ships in the U.S. fleet and in Spain, Poland, Taiwan aboard Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates, Canada on its Halifax-class frigates, New Zealand on its Anzac-class frigates and Australia on its Adelaide-class frigates and Anzac-class frigates. It also serves in a complementary role aboard Aegis cruisers with the AN/SPY-1.
Operation
First tested in 1965 aboard USS Gyatt and introduced in 1975, the AN/SPS-49 operates in the 851–942 MHz, or L-, band and has a range of 256 nautical miles (474 km). The orange-peel parabolic shape of the antenna creates a narrow 3.3°-beam to reduce the probability of detection or jamming. It can rotate at 6 rpm in long range mode or 12 rpm in short-range mode.[1] Default is at 12 rpm for the AN/SPS-49A(V)1, to provide more frequent scans against incoming missiles. The SPS-49A(V)1 can detect out to its full range at either 6 or 12 rpm. The antenna is stabilised to compensate for ships pitch and roll, to a maximum of +/-15° for both pitch and roll in 12 rpm mode, and +/-23.5° for both pitch and roll in 6 rpm mode. The output stage of the transmitter in all variants uses a two-cavity klystron amplifier.
In 1998, the Inspector General of the Department of Defense reported that SPS-40 and SPS-49 radars in Bahrain were "unusable because the equipment operates on a frequency that interferes with the Bahrain telecommunications services". [2]
Variants
As of 2014, there are eleven configurations of the AN/SPS-49(V).
- AN/SPS-49(V)1 - Baseline radar (Various CVN, LHA, LSD and other ships)
- AN/SPS-49(V)2 - (V)1 radar without the coherent side lobe cancellation feature (Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates)
- AN/SPS-49(V)3 - (V)1 radar with the radar video processor (RVP) interface (FC-1) (USS Long Beach)
- AN/SPS-49(V)4 - (V)2 with the RVP interface (Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates)
- AN/SPS-49(V)5 - (V)1 with automatic target detection (ATD) (New Threat Upgrade (NTU) ships)
- AN/SPS-49(V)6 - (V)3 system with double shielded cables and a modified cooling system (USS Ticonderoga)
- AN/SPS-49(V)7 - (V)5 system with a (V)6 cooling system (Aegis combat system)
- AN/SPS-49(V)8 - (V)5 system enhanced to include the AEGIS Tracker modification kit (Aegis combat system)
- AN/SPS-49(V)8 ANZ - (V)8 system modified to interface with the CelsiusTech 9LV-453 combat system (Anzac-class frigates)
- AN/SPS-49(V)9 - (V)5 with medium PRF upgrade (MPU)
- AN/SPS-49A(V)1 - Developed in the mid-1990s. Added radial speed determination on each target, each scan. Improved clutter rejection
See also
References
- ↑ GlobalSecurity AN/SPS-49
- ↑ "Pentagon Equipment Disrupting Phone System". Boca Raton News. Associated Press. October 18, 1998.