AN/APS-6

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Introducing Wiki 3.0

Description

The AN/APS-6 is an American airborne target detection (search) radar with tracking capability. It was used on nightfighters and in game is found on the F6F-5N.

Vehicles equipped with this radar

General info / usage

A visual representation of the general path the radar beam follows during a spiral scan pattern.

The AN/APS-6 is primarily a target detection radar however it does have a limited tracking capability. The radar has a theoretical maximum detection range of 60 km, however in reality air targets will nearly always only be detected at much shorter distances (historically at long ranges the radar was mainly used to detect land masses).

The radar operates in a "Spiral Scan" search pattern, where the radar dish spins rapidly scanning the area in front of the aircraft following a spiral path (see image to the right). As a result of this the radar appears to spin very rapidly (in real life 20 times a second) on the radar display, however targets are not updated on every pass as the radar is pointing at a different angle on each pass. Likewise depending on whether the radar is pointing towards the outside of the spiral or towards the centre the effect of ground clutter is different, making it appear to "pulse" on the radar display.

The radar can lock on to and track targets within a narrow cone out to a maximum range of 1 km; however in order to do this the radar must cease scanning. This function mimics the gun aiming mode found on the real radar. At short range the radar could be switched to gun aiming mode where a circle was displayed on the radar display and the pilot maneuvered their aircraft to position the radar return within the circle (this ensured their guns were pointed at the target). The radar would then indicate to the pilot once the range had closed to that of the guns convergence, allowing the pilot to hit the target.

Search Characteristics
Maximum
Detection
Range
Guaranteed
Detection
Range
Minimum
Detection
Range
Range Settings
60,000 m 7,200 m 150 m 1 km, 9 km, 46 km,
120 km
Search Modes
Search Mode Azimuth Scan
Angle
Elevation Scan
Angle
Scan Time
Default ±60° ±60° 1.2 s (Spiral Scan)
Tracking Characteristics
Maximum
Tracking
Range
Minimum
Tracking
Range
Azimuth Tracking
Angle
Elevation Tracking
Angle
1,000 m 100 m ±15° ±15°

Comparison with analogues

Compared to other wartime radars the AN/APS-6 has good scanning angles and an OK range. Compared to the AN/APG-26 the tracking angles of the AN/APS-6 are poor, although better than those on the RP-5. The tracking range is far inferior to both the AN/APG-26 and RP-5.

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • Decent range
  • Can track targets
  • OK horizontal scanning angles and very good vertical scanning angles

Cons:

  • Inferior range and scanning angles to some high tier radars
  • Tracking capability is limited

History

The AN/APS-6 radar's display in gun-sight mode (blips for demonstration purposes). In the top image the target would be above and to the right of the radar and too far away to engage. In the bottom image the radar (and the aircrafts guns) are pointing at the target and it is the correct distance away for the gun's convergence; if the pilot shoots they would hit the target.

The AN/APS-6 was manufactured by the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, designed for use on carrier-based night fighter aircraft. Work on the radar began in April 1943 with production estimated to start at the beginning of 1944. By September 1043 it was becoming clear that the production target would not be met due to problems arising with Westinghouse's RF head; in order to begin production it was decided to reuse the RF head from the earlier "ASD" radar. The first of these radars, designated AN/APS-6A, began rolling off the production line in March 1944; with the AN/APS-6 (with the new RF head) entering production in September 1944.

The radar weighed 242 lbs (110 kg) and in its normal search mode operated in a spiral scan pattern (see image at the top of the article). In order to scan this way a 400 W, 6,000 rpm spun the radar dish around its longitudinal axis (the axis parallel with the centerline of the aircraft) through a reduction gear box meaning that the radar dish span at 1,200 rpm (20 revolutions a second). As it span the radar dish was made to "nod" back and fourth 60° in each direction, which combined with the spinning produced the spiral pattern and allows the radar to scan a 120° (60° in each direction) cone in front of the aircraft.

The radar's primary display was "B-scope" (a rectangular top down display where the distance from the bottom of the display gives the range, and the distance from the centre line the azimuth, of a target), which provided different function at different ranges. At the 65-Mile & 25-Mile range settings the radar could return large surface contacts such as ships as bright dots on the radar display, and would show land masses as large filled in areas on the display. It was possible to detect air targets on the 25-Mile setting. The 5-Mile & 1-Mile range settings were primarily used for detecting aircraft. At these range settings the B-scope transitioned into a H-Scope; a type of B-scope where each target is returned as two dots next to each other, where the left hand dot is the position of the target and the right-hand dot's position relative to the left hand dot gives the elevation of the target. In these two settings a horizontal bar could also be displayed across the screen, displaying the altitude of the aircraft (allowing it to function as a form of radar altimeter).

A final mode of the radar was the "Gun-Aim" mode; in this mode the B-scope display was replaced with a G-scope, a type of C-scope. In this mode the radar stopped using spiral scan, switching to a conical scan where the radar dish was locked at a slight angle and continued spinning, as a result the radar scanned a narrow cone in front of the aircraft. A circle and a pair of vertical lines would be displayed on the radar screen and targets would be displayed as dots where their distance from the centre of the circle showed their azimuth and elevation relative to the radar. The radar return had a horizontal line passing through it which grows in length as the target gets closer. The pilot would maneuver the aircraft to position the target in the centre of the circle, they would then close in on the target until the horizontal line grew to a point where it was touching the two vertical lines. At that point the pilot would fire the guns in order to hit the target. This is the display mode statically modeled on the radar display in the cockpit of the F6F-5N in game; in the image to the right radar returns have been added to the display to demonstrate it's operation.

Media

An excellent addition to the article would be a video guide, as well as screenshots from the game and photos.

See also

External links