Height finder
A height finder is a ground based aircraft altitude measuring device.
Early height finder implementations were optical devices and later migrated to radar devices. Devices combining both optics and radar were deployed by the U.S. Military.[1]
Optical
In World War II, a height finder was an optical rangefinder used to determine the altitude of an aircraft (actually the slant range from the emplacement which was combined with the angle of sight, in a mechanical computer, to produce altitude), used to direct anti-aircraft guns.[2][3] Examples of American[3] and Japanese[4] versions exist, in the Soviet Union it was usually combined with optical rangefinders,[5][6] certainly a German version exist.
Radar
A height finder radar is a type of 2-dimensional radar that measures altitude of a target.
The operator slews the antenna toward a desired bearing, identifies a target echo at a desired range on the RHI display (RHI = range height indicator), then bisects the target with a cursor that is scaled to indicate the approximate altitude of the target.[7] Such systems often complement 2-dimensional radars which find distance and direction (search radar); thus using two 2-dimensional systems to obtain a 3-dimensional aerial picture. Height finding radars of the 1960s and 70s were distinguished by their antenna being tall, but narrow. As beam shape is a function of antenna shape, the height finder beam was flat and wide horizontally (i.e., not very good at determining bearing to the target), but very thin vertically, allowing accurate measurement of elevation angle, thus altitude.
Modern 3D radar sets find both azimuth and elevation, making separate height finder radars largely obsolete.
See also
References
- ↑ "Anti-Aircraft Fire Control Sets". Department Of The Navy - Naval Historical Center. Retrieved 2007-08-04.
- ↑ The Gunnery Pocket Book, paragraph 428.
- 1 2 "Status Update for the M2 Height Finder Project". Fort MacArthur Museum Association. Retrieved 2007-08-04.
- ↑ "Japanese Height Finder". Tactical and Technical Trends. U.S. Military Intelligence Service. December 2, 1943. Retrieved 2007-08-04.
- ↑ (Russian)
- ↑ (Russian)
- ↑ "AN/FPS-6, 6A, 6B & AN/MPS-14". Online Air Defense Radar Museum. Radomes, Inc. Retrieved 2007-08-04.
External links
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