I don't think I've seen or heard about this anywhere before.
Is this new? YAMGOZ 200D situational awareness visual unit. 3-4 of this make up to panaromic view.
For boats and USVs.
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I don't think I've seen or heard about this anywhere before.
Is this new? YAMGOZ 200D situational awareness visual unit. 3-4 of this make up to panaromic view.
For boats and USVs.
11 km but which 11 km?@Anmdt how much towed Sonar adds to ship's ASW capability? And how effective is hull mounted sonar alone against subsurface threats.
Foe example, Mateksan's sonar on ADA class is stated to detect submarine at around 11/12km in operational condition according to defenceturkey.
Isn't that too late? Given a submarine usually fires it's torpedoes from a distance of 20km. ( from where it is still undetected yet ship cannot outrun the Torpedo)
I have little more than general knowledge of ASW and sonar technology. And I think it has more to do with game theory than technical aspects.@Anmdt how much towed Sonar adds to ship's ASW capability? And how effective is hull mounted sonar alone against subsurface threats.
Foe example, Mateksan's sonar on ADA class is stated to detect submarine at around 11/12km in operational condition according to defenceturkey.
Isn't that too late? Given a submarine usually fires it's torpedoes from a distance of 20km. ( from where it is still undetected yet ship cannot outrun the Torpedo)
I have little more than general knowledge of ASW and sonar technology. And I think it has more to do with game theory than technical aspects.
A submarine would rarely need to get that close to a target (in cases where it is conducting ISR or SOF missions, but not engagement), and hull-mounted sonar (which is a mid-frequency sonar and typically its range is limited by the damping effect of mid-high frequency underwater sound waves due to water properties - salinity, temperature and foreign materials that change conductivity, and therefore the Navy also regularly collects CTD information -) so it is more of a precautionary measure that is conducted in pairs and sometimes in flotilla formation. As the waters get shallow, it both gets hard for the submarine and for the ASW assets.
A submarine may be able to outrun a ship sailing at sonar-operating speed, but once a typical submarine exceeds the silent speed regime, it starts to shine on any sonar receiver (even if it operates in passive mode). Also, most ASW assets have towed arrays capable of detecting torpedoes as well as submarines from longer distances than active mid-frequency sonar, in passive mode.
So a mere 11 km should never be interpreted alone, but with the effect of the towed array, flotilla formation and within game theory aspects.
So to wrap it up, a submarine always has the advantage of being undetected, but once it has revealed its probabilities of location, it has less survivability than any surface asset and is likely to be doomed (note the ASW helicopters equipped with LWTs and dipping sonars that will outrun any submarine, or can work in tandem with hull mounted mid-frequency sonar).
Submarines emit low frequency noise from their wakes or propellers, or from auxiliary noise (machinery, vibration, crew walking around, HVAC units, other mechanical sources, etc.) and/or when they switch on active sonar for various reasons. So a passive array sonar would still work for detection depending on the scenario.Thank you. That is what I was hoping to hear. Low frequency Towed sonar is indispensable for effective ASW. If I am not mistaken HIZIR had low frequency passive array, should it be enough to listen for Submarine at a more significant distance than Mid-frequency hull mounted active sonar?
Or active low frequency emission is required hence Dufas is needed? I mean, Submarine themselves never ping.
So, the previous report about iy being already flown on Akinci is false?
It's been "counting days" for the first flight for the last ten months or so."The ground tests of the Murad AESA radar on AKINCI have been successfully completed. Flight tests are expected to begin in the coming days."
It's been "counting days" for the first flight for the last ten months or so.
If i remember correctly, after the first tests of MURAD, they wanted to revise it.
So maybe this news refers to the revised version of MURAD.
ASELSAN MURAD AESA Radar system was integrated into Akıncı TUAV and an unnamed jet aircraft.
Tests were conducted on Akıncı and as a result of these tests, both the platform and the radar were revised.
You don't have to transfer all data just put the computer on Akıncı and use remote consoleconsidering the huge quantity of data that Aesa radar will generate (few hundred megabytes/min), they just can't monitor the output live or will small delay . they will probably store data on some sort huge nas on Akinci and analyse it post-flight. how effective would that be ?
the need for a test-bed plane is higher than ever.
This is entirely a data link related problem. The platform has nothing to do with it. Currently, our data link capacity is very weak.considering the huge quantity of data that Aesa radar will generate (few hundred megabytes/min), they just can't monitor the output live or will small delay . they will probably store data on some sort huge nas on Akinci and analyse it post-flight. how effective would that be ?
the need for a test-bed plane is higher than ever.