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*[[Oliver Hazard Perry class frigate]]s
*[[Oliver Hazard Perry class frigate]]s
*[[USS Avenger (MCM-1)|Avenger class countermeasure ship]]
*[[USS Avenger (MCM-1)|Avenger class countermeasure ship]]
*[[Kidd class destroyer]]s


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 00:38, 2 January 2016

AN/SPS-55
AN/SPS-55 antenna on USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG-58)
Country of originUnited States
Introduced1971
TypeSurface-search
FrequencyI band (9.05 to 10.0 GHz)
Rangegreater than 50 nautical miles (92.6 km)[1]
Azimuth1.5º
Elevation-10° to +10°, centered on the horizon
Power130-160 kW peak power

The AN/SPS-55 is a solid state surface search and navigation radar. It was developed by Cardion Electronics for the U.S. Navy under a contract awarded in 1971. It was originally developed for a class of ships known as Patrol Frigates, but it was also installed on numerous Cruisers, Destroyers and Minesweepers. It is an I band radar and its antenna consists of two waveguide slotted arrays mounted back-to-back. One array provides linear polarization and the other provides circular polarization. Polarization is user selectable and the circular polarized array is more effective in reducing returns from precipitation.[2]

Features

  • Magnetron transmitter
  • Low noise RF receiver
  • Sensitivity time control
  • Fast time constant filtering
  • Sector radiate

The effective range of the radar is from 50 feet to beyond 50 miles. It is primarily used to detect other ships, coastlines and navigation hazards.

The "Sensitivity Time Control" automatically adjusts the gain of the RF receiver from low to high based on the time elapsed from the last transmitter pulse. This helps to adjust for the fact that near by targets generate a larger return than distant targets of the same size.

The "Fast Time Constant Filtering" helps to remove targets which have a very large range size, like clouds, while passing targets with a smaller range size, like ships or aircraft.

The "Sector Radiate" allows the operator to turn off the transmitter for any sized pie shaped sector of the antenna's 360 degree rotation. An operator might want to do this to avoid detection by an enemy receiver which lies within a known or suspected location.

Platforms

References

AN/SPS-55 antenna on USS Nicholson (DD-982).