Telephonics MCB-RT-1601 Color Weather and Search and Rescue Radar User Manual maintenance manual
Telephonics Corporation Color Weather and Search and Rescue Radar maintenance manual
Contents
- 1. maintenance manual
- 2. installation manual
- 3. manual
maintenance manual
MAINTENANCE MANUAL RT-1601 RECEIVER-TRANSMITTER SECTION 1 DESCRIPTION AND OPERATION 1. General This section provides a general description of the circuit functions and operation of the RT-1601 Receiver-Transmitter. Subsequent information includes operation, equipment part numbers, block diagram discussion, and theory of operation. NOTE: General information for the RDR-1600 Weather Radar System, such as system leading particulars, system operation, and a system operational check is contained in the Radar System Installation Manual, TM106601 Maintenance information for the DA-1203A Radar Antenna is contained in PART 1 of the Weather vision System Antennas Maintenance Manual, I.B. 21000A. 2. Operation The receiver-transmitter (R-T) operates by emitting very short, intense pulses of microwave energy, which are reflected within the range of the radar system. A portion of the radiated energy, reflected by an object having reflective characteristics, is returned along the same general path to the aircraft where it is received and converted into digital data that is representative of the target size. The digital data is then routed to the radar indicator where it is processed to give a visual presentation of the target. The receiver-transmitter is housed in a short ½ ATR form factor case. Overall dimensions can be found on the receiver–transmitter outline drawing. The mounting tray for the R-T unit, which is designed for front loading, provides positive positioning and holding of the unit to the aircraft. The mounting tray is mounted to the aircraft, and the R-T unit can easily be removed and replaced for servicing. Depending upon installation requirements, different models of the mounting tray are available. For ease of maintenance, all circuits are contained on plug-in boards. These PC boards are interconnected by way of a ribbon cable, which makes all connections between PC boards. An interconnect PC board replaces the conventional wiring harness arrangement. The RT-1601 uses a frequency trimmable magnetron for reliable interrogation of beacon transponders; input frequency in an accurate 9375 +5 MHz. The RT-1601 functions as short-range pulse radar for high resolution ground mapping (search) and a long range pulse for conventional weather. The reflected signal is received by the system’s sector scanning antenna, amplified and digitized by the R-T unit, and then routed to the radar indicator. All system power requirements are routed via the R-T unit to the radar indicator and the antenna. 3. Equipment Part Numbers Table 1 lists the TELEPHONICS part number for the RT-1601 Receiver-Transmitter. A brief description of the unit is also provided. Table 2 lists the major assemblies in the RT-1601 815 Broadhollow Road Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 631-755-7000 FAX 631- 755-7200 MAINTENANCE MANUAL RT-1601 RECEIVER-TRANSMITTER TELEPHONICS PART NUMBER 379-2011-001 TYPE DESCRIPTION RT-1601 Provides X-band output to sector-scanning antenna. Reflected signal is amplified by receiver, digitized, and routed to the radar indicator. The magnetron is frequency trimmable and is designed to operate at 9375 +5 MHz to permit reliable triggering of the beacon transponder. Operating parameters permit optimum performance in each of the five modes (3 search modes, weather mode, and beacon mode) complies with TSO certification C102 for ground target approach to within 1000 feet. Table 1. RT-1601 Receiver-Transmitter Part Numbe rs MODULE OR ASSEMBLY NAME Interconnect (Mother) Board Front Panel Connector Board Receiver Board Mode-Decode Board Power Supply Assembly PS Control Board Assembly Power Supply Module Local Oscillator Assembly Beacon Amplifier Assembly Beacon Receiver Module PART NUMBER REFERENCE SERIES 1200 3606464-0501 3606464-0502 3606465-0501 3606458-0501 379-2040-001 4007721-0504 4007714-0501 4007715-0501 4007932-0501 3606473-0501 1100 2000 8000 5000 5000 5000 6000 7000 CONNECTORS J1204, J1205, J1208, J1217, J1218 P1101, P1103 J2006, J2016, P2020, P2021 J8023 J5011 P6012 P7016, P7019 Table 2:RT-1601 Subassemblies and Connectors 4. Block Diagram Discussion (Refer to figure 1) A. Waveform Synchronization and Transmitter Function A crystal-controlled oscillator located in theMode Decode board generates basic synchronization signals for the radar system. The clock frequency is counted down to 1536 Hz for range selections of 10 NM or less in search-one and search-two modes. For all other ranges and modes the clock frequency is counted down to 200 Hz. Either the 1536 Hz or the 200 Hz system trigger keys the transmitter and provides other timing functions. The system trigger also keys the suppression pulse generator to turn off sensitive equipment when the R-T unit transmits. The System trigger is applied to the timing circuit, which controls the AFC gate, the STC-function gate, the AFC-AGC trigger, and the test-pattern-generator circuits. The system trigger is buffered and routed to the modulator driver 815 Broadhollow Road Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 631-755-7000 FAX 631- 755-7200 MAINTENANCE MANUAL RT-1601 RECEIVER-TRANSMITTER where selection of either the modulator short pulse (0.2 usec) or the modulator long pulse (2.35 usec) is selected. Pulse width selection is made depending on the operation mode selected on the radar indicator. Modulator long pulse is selected for modes using a 200-Hz trigger; modulator short pulse is selected for modes using an 1536 Hz trigger. With either modulator pulse, a negative-going, 330volt, 110-ampere pulse is applied to the pulse transformer. The pulse transformer supplies the magnetron with a 5.5 kV, 4.5 A, negative-going pulse that causes the magnetron to oscillate at its 9375 MHz resonant frequency. A 10-kW nominal peak power RF output pulse is generated by the magnetron and is directed through the four-port, E-plane circulator to the radar antenna. B. Receiver Function The R-T unit employs a dual-conversion, superheterodyne receiver. Signals received by the radar antenna are routed through the four-port, E-plane circulator, and the TR limiter to a alanced mixer. A TR limiter is a microwave switch used to prevent damage to the receiver crystals, from the magnetron oscillator high power microwave pulses or from other radars in the vicinity. The balanced mixer combines the echo signal with a signal from the first local oscillator (operating at 9401.3 MHz) to produce a difference frequency of 26.3-MHz. After amplification in the preamplifier stage, the 26.3-MHz signal is mixed with a 36.6-MHz signal from the second local oscillator to produce a 10.3-MHz I-f signal. A bandwidth switch selects either a 2-MHz bandwidth for search-mode operation or a 0.5-MHz bandwidth for weather-mode operation. The 10.3-MHz logarithmic-gain amplifier following the bandwidth switch provides for a great variance (approximately 50 dB) in signal levels usable by the R-T unit. Following the logarithmic-gain amplifier, is the video detector and buffer. The detected, buffered video (in the search 1 mode) is acted upon by the FTC circuit (fast time constant) and it is used to remove noise caused by the sea clutter. In the A/D converter following the FTC circuit the amplitude of the detected video signal is compared to three preset dc thresholds. A two-bit logic code tells the radar indicator the highest threshold level exceeded by the echo return. The two-bit codes for the four thresholds, in increasing level, are 00, 01, 11, and 10. C. AFC Function After the system trigger, while the magnetron is oscillating, the first local oscillator frequency must be adjusted to ensure a correct i-f echo-return signal. The AFC-AGC trigger circuit turns on the AFC gate, and the I-f signal from the preamplifier is supplied to the AFC mixer. Using the 36.6MHz signal from the second local oscillator, the mixer converts the 26.3-MHz I-f signal to a 10.3 MHz second I-f. The discriminator following the 10.3-MHz buffer checks the I-f frequency. If the second I-f is exactly 10.3-MHz the AFC circuits remain stabilized. However, if the second I-f is not exactly 10.3 MHz, the discriminator produces a deviation voltage. The deviation voltage is amplified, integrated, buffered, and applied to the varactor in the first local oscillator to adjust the local oscillator frequency. An inverse-logarithmic-gain buffer amplifier is used between the integrator and the first local oscillator to cancel the logarithmic voltage-to-frequency characteristic of 815 Broadhollow Road Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 631-755-7000 FAX 631- 755-7200 MAINTENANCE MANUAL RT-1601 RECEIVER-TRANSMITTER the first local oscillator. If the first local oscillator is not very nearly 26.3 MHz above the magnetron frequency when the magnetron fires, the 10.3-MHz second AFC I-f will be outside the discriminator capture range. In this case the stop-sweep, or reset, circuit will initiate integrator reset and AFC sweep. To ensure that the first local oscillator does not lock on the difference frequency 26.3 MHz below the magentron frequency, the AFC sweep circuit causes the first local oscillator to start at its highest frequency and sweep down. If the first local oscillator does not lock up during the downsweep, the integrator is reset when the time voltage reaches zero volts and the sweep begins again. D. AGC Function (Wx AGC and BCN AGC) The AGC circuit in the RT-1601 is noise –level actuated. Gain of the preamplifier circuits is adjusted in response to the noise level received by the AGC threshold circuit from the videodetector buffer. Video detector output must not be monitored immediately after the transmitted radar pulse, however, as the returning echo signal would simulate a high noise level. The AFCAGC trigger circuit prevents the false reading by shutting off the AGC threshold circuit during the echo-return time. In beacon, weather, or search-three operating modes (when the pulse repetition rate is 200 Hz), the AGC-AFC trigger turns off the AGC threshold circuit for about three milliseconds after the magnetron fires. This is long enough to allow the echo to return, but still leaves time for the AGC threshold circuit to be turned on for noise-level sampling before the next magnetron firing. To prevent any return after 0.7 milliseconds from affecting the AGC noise-level sampling, the AFCAGC trigger circuit turns on the AFC side-step circuit. This causes the firs local oscillator to be driven off-frequency. Therefore, any echo return after 0.7 millisecond in search-one or search-two modes is ignored. The AFC side-step is also used as a 3000 microsecond gate. E. STC (Sensitivity Time Control) Function The STC function generator is initiated after the transmitter output pulse. The generator causes the gain of the 26.3-MHz preamplifier to increase exponentially. The weaker returns from distant objects are thus amplified more than the strong returns from nearer objects. Thus, objects of the same size or density are made to look equal on the radar indicator, regardless of their distance. F. Test Function When the system is placed in the test mode, a test ground generated by the radar indicator inhibits the transmitter and keys a test pattern generator. The triangular wave developed by the test pattern generator is injected into the video-detector buffer. A resultant test pattern display on the radar indicator is indicative of system performance. The test pattern exhibits three colors, in five bands. G. Beacon Amplifier When operating in beacon mode, or dual mode (e.g., weather plus beacon), the R-T unit must transmit the standard 9375-MHz signal and receive the 9310-MHz transponder signal. To process the 9310-MHz signal, a separate beacon I-f amplifier (91.3 MHz) and beacon video detector are 815 Broadhollow Road Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 631-755-7000 FAX 631- 755-7200 MAINTENANCE MANUAL RT-1601 RECEIVER-TRANSMITTER used. The R-T unit first local oscillator operates at 9401.3-MHz to convert the standard 9375-MHz signal to a 26.3-MHz intermediate frequency. The same first local oscillator converts the 9310-MHz transponder signal to 91.3 MHz. The 91.3-MHz signal is amplified by the preamplifier and the 91.3MHz I-f amplifier, detected, and then applied to the video-detector buffer. 5. Detailed Theory of Operation A. Power Supply (1) General (See figure 1.) The power supply for the R-T unit converts +28 Vdc into the dc voltages needed for unit operation: +23V, +6V, +15V, -20.5V and –330V. Two series transistors mounted on the main frame are driven by the power supply circuits to provide regulated -23 Vdc. An overload circuit in power supply limits current. Since +28 Vdc is continuously applied to the R-T unit, a power supply on-off switch circuit is used to control R-T unit operation in response to demands from the radar indicator. All voltages except the +23 Vdc are developed by chopping the +23 Vdc, then transforming, rectifying, and filtering the chopped voltage. The high voltage control and overload circuit, in addition to protecting the high voltage ac-dc converter from overload, provides the trigger enable signal. Trigger enable is generated after a 80-second, turn-on delay from the time-delay circuit, and is used to switch-on –330 Vdc to the magnetron modulator as well as to enable the modulator trigger on the mode decoder board. A fan is provided for cooling the power supply. Figure 1 POWER SUPPLY BLOCK DIAGRAM 815 Broadhollow Road Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 631-755-7000 FAX 631- 755-7200 MAINTENANCE MANUAL RT-1601 RECEIVER-TRANSMITTER BEACON RECEIVER Transmitter To Antenna STC MAGNETRON 9375Mhz +/- 5Mhz Pulse LONG PULSE MODULATOR 91.3Mhz Log AMP Vid-Detec Gain Adj STC Pulse 91.3Mhz 10.3Mhz 10.3Mhz T-R Limitter Pre AMP SHORT PULSE MODULATOR Log AMP BW Control Mixer Log AMP Vid-Detec Test Pulse STC WX Receiver FTC Switch BCN en 36.6Mhz 9375Mhz AFC Sweep 26.3Mhz MIXER 36.6Mhz 2nd L.O 9401.3Mhz AFC Discriminator Data Comparator BW Control VCO 1st L.O Sys Trigger AGC Gate Analog Video Data bits PRF Generator STC Generator Power Supply Mode Set NC-104 FUNCTIONS Mode Control and Timing GEN System Trigger Gain Control Fault Monitor Test Func Generator Mode Set Figure 2 RT-1601 BLOCK DIAGRAM 815 Broadhollow Road Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 631-755-7000 FAX 631- 755-7200 Mode Decode 453 Data to display 429 Data
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