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Originally posted by Griff
Originally posted by BlueRaja
If you turn off the transponder, you'll disappear from their screen.
This is actually a false statement. They would not disappear from the screen. Just the transponder information would disappear. The blip would still be there.
How hard is it to track something that you had been tracking but just turned off it's transponder? Why can't you just follow the blip? The blip would still be there.
Originally posted by jthomas
Just what DO you want, Griff?
Originally posted by percievedreality
Originally posted by Griff
Originally posted by BlueRaja
If you turn off the transponder, you'll disappear from their screen.
This is actually a false statement. They would not disappear from the screen. Just the transponder information would disappear. The blip would still be there.
How hard is it to track something that you had been tracking but just turned off it's transponder? Why can't you just follow the blip? The blip would still be there.
I concur, BlueRaja is wrong here. Radar uses energy wave returns to track an entity in time and space. A "transponder" is simply a beacon that transmits other identifing information about the object. Turning off the transponder on a plane isn't going to make it disappear on radar. Flying low enough will. You think the HUGE budget spent on steath technology would have been cheep, HAHA, just cut out the transponder and you can be stealth. Not that easy, little harder to trick radar returns, thus the enormous costs for development.
Originally posted by BlueRaja
The screens ATC use are not raw radar data. They have radar screens too, but they'd have to go to the radar screen to track something that didn't have a functioning transponder. If you have screen full of blips, that makes it a difficult task to pick out which target was the one that didn't have the transponder on.
Originally posted by BlueRaja
If you read the accounts from that day, and all the effort it took to ID, and separate the friendlies and unfriendly targets, you'll see it was much more than simply looking for 4 blips without transponders on.
That's why it's so important for airliners to have functioning transponders. Otherwise, you'd have thousands of blips, without an ID, azimuth, speed, altitude, etc.. info flying around, and no way to tell specific aircraft which direction to turn to avoid collisions.
Originally posted by Griff
Unless of course there were added blips without transponders because of the war games.