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HF 200 British Height Finding Radar

HF 200

Height-Finding Radar
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Basic Information
Name
HF 200 British Height Finding Radar
Designation
HF 200
Alternate Designation
HF 200
Equipment Type
Height-Finding Radar
Manufacturer
The Decca Radar company
Date of Introduction
1976
Description

A Decca HF 200 height finder at RAF Boulmer with the RX12874 Passive Detection aerial and the redundant Type 80 modulator building in the background on the extreme left. The height finding an element of the Linesman system, the HF 200 succeeded the American AN/FPS-6 height finder radars used in the Rotor system. The HF 200's (along with the AN/FPS-6) were also known as "Nodding Horrors" and they spewed hydraulic oil everywhere. HF 200 Mk3's were located at the three main linesman sites at R.A.F. Boulmer, R.A.F. Staxton Wold, and R.A.F. Neatishead. An Mk4 was commissioned at R.A.F Saxa Vord in the Shetland Islands in 1979 and there was an Mk2 at R.A.F. Troodos, Cyprus. Dave Quantrill tells me that the Troodos Mk2 featured a valve console among other things and that it was a horrible thing! Note the barbed wire in the picture; for many years Linesman sites were protected only by a wire mesh perimeter fence but in the mid '70's the Ministry of Defence must have bought a job lot of barbed wire cheap from someone because they put it up everywhere! Interestingly enough no one seems to have considered what could be done about airstrikes, mortars, and rocket-propelled grenades - the site was totally undefended from aerial attack, and the perimeter fences were not patrolled! Once upon a time all of the antennas at R.A.F. Boulmer were painted in a pale blue shade, quite pretty really, and it has been suggested that this was to satisfy the whims of the then Duke of Northumberland who happened to own the land on which the site of the operation stood, or so the story went. Eventually, though someone thought they really should be camouflaged so they were painted in a shade that in Scotland might be called "Sharnie Green"!

System
Alternative Designation HF 200
Type Height Finder Radar
Manufacturer The Decca Radar company
Crew INA
Frequency A frequency in the range 2,800 - 3,010 MHz (E/F band).
Class of Equipment Long range, medium power, fixed, nodding height finder operating in the E/F band.
Purpose of Equipment Main Role: Height finding on aircraft at long, medium, or short-range in the UK and overseas. Subsidiary Role. Provision of limited volumetric cover in place of inoperative main search radar.
Coverage Azimuth: 0 deg to 360 deg by slewing at a maximum rate of 6 rev/min. Elevation: -3 deg to +33 deg at 20 scans/minute to a range of 50 nm.
Coverage in Volumetric Role Azimuth. Equivalent to 1.5 revs/mm over sector up to 45 deg. Elevation. -3 deg to +6 deg
Range Performance About 120 nm on a 2 square meter target, 180 nm on a 10 square meter target, and 210 nm on a 15 square meter target with 90% probability of paint, at 40,000 feet.
Discrimination 1 nm at 150 nm in range, at 150 nm in elevation.
Aerial Characteristics Polarization: Vertical or circular. Beam Shape: Horizontal beamwidth 3 deg at 3 dB points; Vertical beamwidth 0.75 deg at 3 dB points.
Aerial Reflector Double curvature, 10.68 m high by 2.43 m wide.
Aerial Feed Horn wave guide.
Transmitter Type: Magnetron; Pulse Width. 5 U.S.; PRF. 200-250 pps; Peak Power Output. 2.5 MW.
Receiver Two output channels: linear and logarithmic.
Signal Processing Vertical or circular polarization, fast time constant (FTC) and swept gain. Instantaneous automatic gain control (IAGC) on logarithmic channel.
Accuracy 150 nm.
Dimensions
Length INA
Width INA
Height INA
Weight, Combat INA
Details
Country of Origin United Kingdom
Category Radars
Land > Radars
Filter Label
H
Classification
Domain
Ground
Equipment Status
Active
Operators (1)
United Kingdom
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