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AN/APQ-120

The AN/APQ-120 was an aircraft fire control radar (FCR) manufactured by Westinghouse for the McDonnell Douglas F-4E Phantom II. AN/APQ-120 has a long line of lineage, with its origin traced all the way back to Aero-13 FCR developed by the same company in the early 1950s. A total of half a dozen FCRs were tested and evaluated on the first 18 F-4s built,[1] but they were soon replaced by later radars produced in great numbers, including AN/APQ-120.

AN/APQ-120
Country of originUnited States
TypeFire control

Aero 13 Edit

 
Aero-13 Fire Control System

The Aero 13 FCR designed for Douglas F4D Skyray is the origin of AN/APQ-120, and it established the configuration of the airborne FCR not only for the radar families of AN/APQ-120, but also a standard for all other airborne radars to follow: Aero 13 FCR was designed as an integrated cylindrical module that could be plugged into the nose of an aircraft, instead of a set of semi-independent black boxes.[1]

Aero 1A Edit

Aero 13 did not have any capability for semi-active radar homing (SARH) air-to-air missile (AAM)s. 1A FCR was developed to add this capability by incorporating a continuous wave illuminator for SARH AAMs. This configuration of Aero 1A remained unchanged for later radars for F-4s all the way until AN/APQ-50.[1]

AN/APQ-35 Edit

 
Maintenance on an APQ-35 radar of a F3D-2 in Korea, 1953

The next radar to be installed on F-4 prototypes and pre-production series was AN/APQ-35, which was actually consisted of two radars: the AN/APS-21 search radar that could locate fighter-size targets at a range of 32 kilometers (20 miles), and the AN/APS-26 targeting radar, with a range of 3.2 kilometers (2 miles).[2]

AN/APQ-36 Edit

AN/APQ-36 is the improvement over earlier AN/APQ-35, and when AN/APQ-36 entered service on Douglas F3D Skyknight and Vought F7U Cutlass, it was the largest airborne FCR of its time. The more powerful AN/APQ-36 with large size did not have any problem being installed on F-4 prototypes, so that more powerful FCR of larger size would be developed.[3]

AN/APQ-41 Edit

The AN/APQ-41 was an improvement over the AN/APQ-36, and was designed to provide air intercept, search, to automatically track a selected target, and to supply lead angle and range information. Facilities were also provided for air-to-surface search, for beacon interrogation and response display, and for response display when used in connection with identification friend or foe (IFF). Specifications:[4]

  • Search or Gun-Aim Range: 24 nm max, 200 yd min
  • Ground Mapping Range: 100 nm
  • Beacon Range: 200 nm
  • Reliable Gun-Aim Prediction: 2,000 yd max
  • Tracking Accuracy: 25 yd within the ranges of 200 and 2,000 yd
  • Future Range Accuracy: 25 yd
  • Azimuth (Search): 106.5 deg
  • Elevation (Search): 13 deg (within 30 deg of aircraft center line)
  • Azimuth (Track): 116.5 deg
  • Elevation (Track): 116.5 deg
  • Accuracy (Search and Track): 4% all indications
  • Type of Presentation:
    • B-scope (Search)-Target azimuth and range, range strobe, range markers, beacon and IFF responses
    • C-scope (Search)-Target strobe, targets, straddled by range strobe, artificial horizon line, scan pattern
    • C-scope (Track)-Target dot, range rate circle and dot, artificial horizon line
  • Fixed Range Marker: 25-mi markers on 100 and 200-mi scales
  • Radar Frequency (Search and Track): 9375 30 mc
  • Beacon Frequency: Transmitting, 9375 30 mc; receiving, 9310 1 mc
  • Operating Temperature:-55 to +55 deg C
  • Altitude Limit: 52,000 ft

AN/APQ-46 Edit

AN/APQ-46 is the last radar tested and evaluated on F-4 prototypes and pre-production series. F-4 equipped with this radar was specifically modified to meet US Navy Ferret electronic countermeasure aircraft requirement, which eventually did not materialize.[1]

AN/APQ-50 Edit

 
APQ-50 radar of a Douglas F4D Skyray

AN/APQ-50 is the radar installed on low-rate initial production batch of F-4s, but as with earlier radars, it was not used in great numbers in comparison to later radars of the same family. The parabolic antenna is 24 inches in diameter, and in addition to providing all weather capability, AN/APQ-50 FCR also provides information on automatic firing of rockets.[5]

AN/APQ-72 Edit

AN/APQ-72 FCR is a development of AN/APQ-50, with the diameter of the antenna increased by a third to 32 inches from the original 24 inches of AN/APQ-50. AN/APA-128 CW illuminator is integrated with the radar to give it a capability for radar guided AAMs. AN/APQ-72 is the first radar installed on F-4s to be built in great numbers, starting with the 19th F-4 produced.[5]

AN/APG-59 Edit

AN/APG-59 FCR is a modified AN/APQ-72 designed for the British. The main difference between AN/APG-59 and its predecessor is that the radar dish could be swung sideways in order to reduce the length of the aircraft to 54 feet so that it could fit on the small deck lifts of British carriers. Used in the AN/AWG-10.[6]

AN/APQ-100 Edit

AN/APQ-100 is the replacement for the AN/APQ-72, and it featured a redesigned radar scope in the rear cockpit that offered a plan position indicator (PPI) mapping display option, and adjustable range strobe for bombing. For air-to-ground missions, the radar interfaced with the inertial platform on F-4s.[7]

AN/APG-60 Edit

Modified AN/APQ-100 for the British to replace the AN/APG-59. As with AN/APG-59, AN/APG-60 also had a radar dish which could be swung sideways in order to reduce the length of the aircraft to 54 feet so that it could fit on the small deck lifts of British carriers. AN/APG-60 was later upgraded with Doppler capability during its upgrades, and integrated in the AN/AWG-11.[1]

AN/APQ-109 Edit

AN/APQ-109 is an improvement of the earlier AN/APQ-100 with an improved cockpit display able to handle TV imagery from weapons such as AGM-62 Walleye. Other significant additions included air-to-ground ranging, ground beacon identification and display capabilities. AN/APQ-109 was an improved, more reliable "hybrid" version of the AN/APQ-100 with solid-state components in the low-voltage sections.[7]

AN/APG-61 Edit

Modified AN/APQ-109 for the British to replace AN/APG-60. As with AN/APG-59/60, AN/APG-61 also had a radar dish which could be swung sideways in order to reduce the length of the aircraft to 54 feet so that it could fit on the small deck lifts of British carriers. Used in the AN/AWG-12.[1]

AN/APQ-117 Edit

AN/APQ-117 terrain following and attack radar, developed from earlier AN/APQ-109, with terrain following capability added.[8]

AN/APQ-120 Edit

A fully solid-state radar developed from AN/APQ-117, the AN/APQ-120 radar was much more compact than its predecessors, allowing it to fit into the nose along with the cannon, and the radar was later integrated into AN/AWG-14.[7]

AN/AWG-10 Edit

 
AN/AWG-10 with AN/APG-59

[inconsistent]

AN/AWG stands for (A) Piloted Aircraft (W) Armament (G) Fire Control. AN/APG-59 was the first FCR integrated into AN/AWG-10, which developed into two more versions, A and B. The original AN/AWG-10 can detect an aerial target with 5 square meters radar cross section more than 100 kilometers away.

AN/AWG-10A is a development of the original AN/AWG-10, with great improvement in reliability and maintainability by replacing the original transmitter in AN/AWG-10 with a solid state unit whose only tube was a klystron power amplifier. Adding a digital computer allowed much more effective missile launch equations. AN/AWG-10A also incorporated a new servoed optical sight. There were also additions of new modes such as continuously displayed impact point mode, freeze displayed impact mode, and computer released visual mode. AN/AWG-10B was further digitized version of AN/AWG-10/10A but retained many analog circuits. A key AVC (avionics change) was the replacement of the unreliable Doppler Spectrum Analyzer (DSA) with a reliable Digital Spectrum Processor (DSP) which also increased accuracy when operating in doppler mode.[9]

AN/AWG-11 Edit

AN/AWG-11 was a British AN/AWG-10 license-built by Ferranti. The radar used was AN/APG-60, and AN/AWG-11 is a slightly modified AN/AWG-10 in that it's compatible with AGM-12 Bullpup and WE.177, so that British F-4s can perform nuclear strike missions if required.[10]

AN/AWG-12 Edit

AN/AWG-12 was an improved AN/AWG-11 built by Ferranti with AN/APG-61 FCR. The main difference between AN/AWG-11 and AN/AWG-12 is that the latter has a better ground mapping mode, and it also can control a belly mounted SUU-23/A Vulcan. AN/AWG-12 finally retired in 1992 when the last F-4s in British service retired, and during its service life, it was upgraded with improvements of the AN/AWG-10A/B.[10]

AN/AWG-14 Edit

AN/AWG-14 is the final member of the lineage of this radar family, and it is a fully digitized upgrade of the AWG series[11] incorporating AN/APQ-120. The open architecture and modular design enable AWG-14 to accommodate different radars, such as AN/APG-65, AN/APG-66, AN/APG-76, Elta EL/M-2011/2021 and EL/M-2032.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Bill Gunston (Dec 12, 1988). The Great Book of Modern Warplanes (1st ed.). Random House Value Publishing. ISBN 9780517633670.
  2. ^ APQ-35 September 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  4. ^ APQ-41 September 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Peter Davis (Nov 17, 2009). USN F-4 Phantom II vs VPAF MiG-17/19: Vietnam 1965-73 (Duel) (1st ed.). Osprey Publishing. p. 15. ISBN 978-1846034756.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-03-27. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  7. ^ a b c "AN/APQ-100/109/120". Retrieved 2012-10-13.
  8. ^ APQ-117
  9. ^ AWG-10
  10. ^ a b "AN/AWG-11/12".
  11. ^ AWG-14

External links Edit

  Media related to AN/APQ-120 at Wikimedia Commons

aircraft, fire, control, radar, manufactured, westinghouse, mcdonnell, douglas, phantom, long, line, lineage, with, origin, traced, back, aero, developed, same, company, early, 1950s, total, half, dozen, fcrs, were, tested, evaluated, first, built, they, were,. The AN APQ 120 was an aircraft fire control radar FCR manufactured by Westinghouse for the McDonnell Douglas F 4E Phantom II AN APQ 120 has a long line of lineage with its origin traced all the way back to Aero 13 FCR developed by the same company in the early 1950s A total of half a dozen FCRs were tested and evaluated on the first 18 F 4s built 1 but they were soon replaced by later radars produced in great numbers including AN APQ 120 AN APQ 120Country of originUnited StatesTypeFire control Contents 1 Aero 13 2 Aero 1A 3 AN APQ 35 4 AN APQ 36 5 AN APQ 41 6 AN APQ 46 7 AN APQ 50 8 AN APQ 72 9 AN APG 59 10 AN APQ 100 11 AN APG 60 12 AN APQ 109 13 AN APG 61 14 AN APQ 117 15 AN APQ 120 16 AN AWG 10 17 AN AWG 11 18 AN AWG 12 19 AN AWG 14 20 See also 21 References 22 External linksAero 13 Edit nbsp Aero 13 Fire Control SystemThe Aero 13 FCR designed for Douglas F4D Skyray is the origin of AN APQ 120 and it established the configuration of the airborne FCR not only for the radar families of AN APQ 120 but also a standard for all other airborne radars to follow Aero 13 FCR was designed as an integrated cylindrical module that could be plugged into the nose of an aircraft instead of a set of semi independent black boxes 1 Aero 1A EditAero 13 did not have any capability for semi active radar homing SARH air to air missile AAM s 1A FCR was developed to add this capability by incorporating a continuous wave illuminator for SARH AAMs This configuration of Aero 1A remained unchanged for later radars for F 4s all the way until AN APQ 50 1 AN APQ 35 Edit nbsp Maintenance on an APQ 35 radar of a F3D 2 in Korea 1953The next radar to be installed on F 4 prototypes and pre production series was AN APQ 35 which was actually consisted of two radars the AN APS 21 search radar that could locate fighter size targets at a range of 32 kilometers 20 miles and the AN APS 26 targeting radar with a range of 3 2 kilometers 2 miles 2 AN APQ 36 EditAN APQ 36 is the improvement over earlier AN APQ 35 and when AN APQ 36 entered service on Douglas F3D Skyknight and Vought F7U Cutlass it was the largest airborne FCR of its time The more powerful AN APQ 36 with large size did not have any problem being installed on F 4 prototypes so that more powerful FCR of larger size would be developed 3 AN APQ 41 EditThe AN APQ 41 was an improvement over the AN APQ 36 and was designed to provide air intercept search to automatically track a selected target and to supply lead angle and range information Facilities were also provided for air to surface search for beacon interrogation and response display and for response display when used in connection with identification friend or foe IFF Specifications 4 Search or Gun Aim Range 24 nm max 200 yd min Ground Mapping Range 100 nm Beacon Range 200 nm Reliable Gun Aim Prediction 2 000 yd max Tracking Accuracy 25 yd within the ranges of 200 and 2 000 yd Future Range Accuracy 25 yd Azimuth Search 106 5 deg Elevation Search 13 deg within 30 deg of aircraft center line Azimuth Track 116 5 deg Elevation Track 116 5 deg Accuracy Search and Track 4 all indications Type of Presentation B scope Search Target azimuth and range range strobe range markers beacon and IFF responses C scope Search Target strobe targets straddled by range strobe artificial horizon line scan pattern C scope Track Target dot range rate circle and dot artificial horizon line Fixed Range Marker 25 mi markers on 100 and 200 mi scales Radar Frequency Search and Track 9375 30 mc Beacon Frequency Transmitting 9375 30 mc receiving 9310 1 mc Operating Temperature 55 to 55 deg C Altitude Limit 52 000 ftAN APQ 46 EditAN APQ 46 is the last radar tested and evaluated on F 4 prototypes and pre production series F 4 equipped with this radar was specifically modified to meet US Navy Ferret electronic countermeasure aircraft requirement which eventually did not materialize 1 AN APQ 50 Edit nbsp APQ 50 radar of a Douglas F4D SkyrayAN APQ 50 is the radar installed on low rate initial production batch of F 4s but as with earlier radars it was not used in great numbers in comparison to later radars of the same family The parabolic antenna is 24 inches in diameter and in addition to providing all weather capability AN APQ 50 FCR also provides information on automatic firing of rockets 5 AN APQ 72 EditAN APQ 72 FCR is a development of AN APQ 50 with the diameter of the antenna increased by a third to 32 inches from the original 24 inches of AN APQ 50 AN APA 128 CW illuminator is integrated with the radar to give it a capability for radar guided AAMs AN APQ 72 is the first radar installed on F 4s to be built in great numbers starting with the 19th F 4 produced 5 AN APG 59 EditAN APG 59 FCR is a modified AN APQ 72 designed for the British The main difference between AN APG 59 and its predecessor is that the radar dish could be swung sideways in order to reduce the length of the aircraft to 54 feet so that it could fit on the small deck lifts of British carriers Used in the AN AWG 10 6 AN APQ 100 EditAN APQ 100 is the replacement for the AN APQ 72 and it featured a redesigned radar scope in the rear cockpit that offered a plan position indicator PPI mapping display option and adjustable range strobe for bombing For air to ground missions the radar interfaced with the inertial platform on F 4s 7 AN APG 60 EditModified AN APQ 100 for the British to replace the AN APG 59 As with AN APG 59 AN APG 60 also had a radar dish which could be swung sideways in order to reduce the length of the aircraft to 54 feet so that it could fit on the small deck lifts of British carriers AN APG 60 was later upgraded with Doppler capability during its upgrades and integrated in the AN AWG 11 1 AN APQ 109 EditAN APQ 109 is an improvement of the earlier AN APQ 100 with an improved cockpit display able to handle TV imagery from weapons such as AGM 62 Walleye Other significant additions included air to ground ranging ground beacon identification and display capabilities AN APQ 109 was an improved more reliable hybrid version of the AN APQ 100 with solid state components in the low voltage sections 7 AN APG 61 EditModified AN APQ 109 for the British to replace AN APG 60 As with AN APG 59 60 AN APG 61 also had a radar dish which could be swung sideways in order to reduce the length of the aircraft to 54 feet so that it could fit on the small deck lifts of British carriers Used in the AN AWG 12 1 AN APQ 117 EditAN APQ 117 terrain following and attack radar developed from earlier AN APQ 109 with terrain following capability added 8 AN APQ 120 EditA fully solid state radar developed from AN APQ 117 the AN APQ 120 radar was much more compact than its predecessors allowing it to fit into the nose along with the cannon and the radar was later integrated into AN AWG 14 7 AN AWG 10 Edit nbsp AN AWG 10 with AN APG 59 inconsistent AN AWG stands for A Piloted Aircraft W Armament G Fire Control AN APG 59 was the first FCR integrated into AN AWG 10 which developed into two more versions A and B The original AN AWG 10 can detect an aerial target with 5 square meters radar cross section more than 100 kilometers away AN AWG 10A is a development of the original AN AWG 10 with great improvement in reliability and maintainability by replacing the original transmitter in AN AWG 10 with a solid state unit whose only tube was a klystron power amplifier Adding a digital computer allowed much more effective missile launch equations AN AWG 10A also incorporated a new servoed optical sight There were also additions of new modes such as continuously displayed impact point mode freeze displayed impact mode and computer released visual mode AN AWG 10B was further digitized version of AN AWG 10 10A but retained many analog circuits A key AVC avionics change was the replacement of the unreliable Doppler Spectrum Analyzer DSA with a reliable Digital Spectrum Processor DSP which also increased accuracy when operating in doppler mode 9 AN AWG 11 EditAN AWG 11 was a British AN AWG 10 license built by Ferranti The radar used was AN APG 60 and AN AWG 11 is a slightly modified AN AWG 10 in that it s compatible with AGM 12 Bullpup and WE 177 so that British F 4s can perform nuclear strike missions if required 10 AN AWG 12 EditAN AWG 12 was an improved AN AWG 11 built by Ferranti with AN APG 61 FCR The main difference between AN AWG 11 and AN AWG 12 is that the latter has a better ground mapping mode and it also can control a belly mounted SUU 23 A Vulcan AN AWG 12 finally retired in 1992 when the last F 4s in British service retired and during its service life it was upgraded with improvements of the AN AWG 10A B 10 AN AWG 14 EditAN AWG 14 is the final member of the lineage of this radar family and it is a fully digitized upgrade of the AWG series 11 incorporating AN APQ 120 The open architecture and modular design enable AWG 14 to accommodate different radars such as AN APG 65 AN APG 66 AN APG 76 Elta EL M 2011 2021 and EL M 2032 See also EditList of radars Joint Electronics Type Designation SystemReferences Edit a b c d e f Bill Gunston Dec 12 1988 The Great Book of Modern Warplanes 1st ed Random House Value Publishing ISBN 9780517633670 APQ 35 Archived September 26 2012 at the Wayback Machine APQ 36 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2013 05 17 APQ 41 Archived September 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Peter Davis Nov 17 2009 USN F 4 Phantom II vs VPAF MiG 17 19 Vietnam 1965 73 Duel 1st ed Osprey Publishing p 15 ISBN 978 1846034756 APG 59 Archived from the original on 2014 03 27 Retrieved 2013 05 17 a b c AN APQ 100 109 120 Retrieved 2012 10 13 APQ 117 AWG 10 a b AN AWG 11 12 AWG 14External links Edit nbsp Media related to AN APQ 120 at Wikimedia Commons 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AN APQ 120 amp oldid 1167491108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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