AN/APG-78

From War Thunder Wiki
Revision as of 20:51, 29 October 2023 by Arya8AB (talk | contribs) (A page for the AN/APG-78 Longbow radar (found on the AH-64D and variants))
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Description

The AN/APG-78 "Longbow" is an American airborne target detection (search) radar found on the AH-64D Apache Longbow and its variants. It has two modes, Ground-search mode (A-G) and Aerial-search (A-A) mode

Vehicles equipped with this radar

General info / usage

Add description about general use and more presets

Features
Band Pulse mode PD mode MTI mode IRST mode TWS mode SARH
K X X X X X
Search characteristics
Mode Max range Effective range Display ranges IFF
A-G 8 km 8 km 4 km, 8 km X
A-A
Search modes
Mode Scan type Azimuth Elevation Period
A-G Two-way raster ±45° -25°/+25° 3 s
A-A ±180° -25°/+25° 6 s

Comparison with analogues

The AN/APG-78 has a large search zone compared to other helicopter radars, such as on the Mi-28NM and Ka-52 (N-025 and RN01-Crossbow respectively). The Mi-28NMs N-025 has a search zone of 180° x 20°, while the Ka-52s nose mounted Crossbow has a search zone of 120° x 20°.

Radars Found on Helicopters
Radar Search Zone Maximum Range Type
AN/APG-78 360° x 20° 8 km Dome Mounted
N-025 180° x 20°
RN01-Crossbow 120° x 20° 12 km Nose Mounted

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • Large search zone of 360° x 20°

Cons:

  • Shorter range

History

The AN/APG-78 Longbow is a mast-mounted fire control radar (FCR) designated AN/APG-78. The FCR is a multimode millimetric wave (MMW) radar[1] The AN/APG-78 FCR has four modes of operation, air-targeting mode, ground-targeting mode, terrain-profiling mode and a fourth monitoring mode that isolates electronic failures for maintenance and testing.[1][2]

Media

Excellent additions to the article would be video guides, screenshots from the game, and photos.

See also

External links

References

Citations
  1. 1.0 1.1 (Ian and Seabridge 345)
  2. (Ian and Seabridge 346)
Bibliography
  • Moir, Ian, and Allan Seabridge. Military Avionics Systems. Wiley, 2006.