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![]() "Robert Baer" wrote in message ... SNIP "Faraday shield" to some degree is a myth. I have seen radars inside quonset huts track a *bird* flying a few miles away (thru the metal wall)! You must have some strange buddies. Who in the world would set up a radar within a metal hut? And even if they did, who would think it's a good idea to stay inside with it if it were on? There's nothing mythical about the Faraday shield; it works really well, so long as there are no discontinuities (apertures) and sufficient thickness and conductivity. Under real-world conditions, steel works pretty good, and any thickness sufficient to support itself will yield great shielding effectiveness. So the only real performance variable left is the holes in the conductive surface. How many, maximum dimension, proximity of radiating source to the shield, etc. While I would expect a Quonset hut to really mess up the accuracy of a radar, it likely wouldn't be a good shield, as the floor isn't metal, I don't think the ends are metal, and the various skin panels are rather poorly RF bonded. Ed wb6wsn I do not think your objections concerning the floor or the bonding of the panels are too relevant. The ends are metal and not relevant either. The radar was pointing right at the wall (no windows nearby); any presumed leakage via remote holes that you assumed might allow the transmitted signal to leak, but would then not be focused on the bird(s) and the path lengths would vary. But the reflected signal from the bird or birds would be rather weak and could not possibly be received via the same wild path(s) to a very directional antenna. My point is that a Farady shield is a good attenuator, but not "perfect" as ASSuMEd. And it sure is not "flat" in attenuation characteristic as a function of frequency. Those weren't objections, they were speculations on my part as to how you boys could have been finessing the generally applicable laws of physics. But truly, the story stinks. So you and your army buddies are in this metal hut, with a fairly high-power radar, and somebody comes up with the bright idea to turn the thing on. Apparently no thought about RF personnel hazards and no concern about strong reflections cooking your detector. Did you test your M16's in a Quonset hut too? Next point. "The radar was pointing right at the wall..." Now tell me, in a semi-circular Quonset hut, how do you point anything "right at the wall"? Maybe straight up? Now, a bird doesn't have a very big radar cross section, maybe only about 0.01 square meters, so the return loss is really big. And to resolve a single bird, I'm gonna guess that you had an X or K band radar. So let's run some numbers. Let's say you had a 100kW radar, with a 30 dBi antenna of 1 square meter aperture. At 1500 meters, your detector power would be about 1 picowatt, or -60 dBm. Well hey, that's pretty decent, I'll bet you could see a bird at one mile. But that's assuming no loss at all due to the metal hut skin. Let's see what happens if we say that the metal hut walls give us only 40 dB of shielding (by absorption or reflection, it doesn't matter). That bites 80 dB out of your path budget, putting your detector signal down to -140 dBm. I think your story just ran out of luck. Now you can argue about the 40 dB shielding effectiveness of the metal wall, but I'll say that I was being very generous about that. At 10 GHz, I know (How? Easy, I do it everyday. Just 3 days ago, I was keeping some 1.3 GHz from radiating off of some cables, and it was common old Reynolds Wrap to the rescue.), I can get 100 dB out of a sheet of aluminum foil. The SE is so damn high from the material that the only significant factor is when the energy finds a path around the shield. Don't try to argue that a Faraday cage leaks; you appear to be trying to build a general case based on your experience of always having observed leaky structures. Sure, I know that shielding varies with lots of factors, conductivity, permeability, thickness, frequency, angle of incidence, distance from source, and then there's the problem of apertures. But your hut, with plain old galvanized steel about 1/16" thick, would make a great shielded enclosure, as long as the joints didn't leak. BTW, I don't like using the term "Faraday cage". Despite all due respect to Mr. Faraday, calling it a shielded enclosure is a clearer description. Ed wb6wsn I was not alluding to leakage; a more accurate term would be re-radiation. Take an ordinary transformer; it radiates a magnetic field, despite the fact that the core is a closed loop. In fact, one could get nasty and say the same thing about a toroid transformer. Now add a shorted copper turn around the outside of the ordinary transformer's core (i have seen this on many TV power transformers and others as well). What happens? That magnetic field induces a current in that shorted turn, making an opposing magnetic field - thereby reducing the net radiated magnetic field greatly - but not to zero. Now, instead of using that closely wrapped copper shoted turn, put that transformer inside that shielded room you love. My shielded enclosure only asks that I respect it; I don't think it would provide better SE even if I told it that I loved it. Results: great reduction, but not to zero. Nothing ever goes to zero; I'll usually settle for "great" reductions. Increase the frequency to something one might consider RF. Now one has an RF transmitter inside that shielded room, inducing currents in the wall(s). Those currents create opposing fields, and greatly attenuate the signal outside the walls. You're getting a little fuzzy here. The propagating wave induces surface currents on the metal barrier. The currents "sink" into the metal, decreasing to about 37% (1/e) in what's called a "skin depth". At 10 GHz, a "skin depth" in steel is really thin. After even 10 skin depths, the current is down to only about 1/100,000 of what was on the surface. And there's a whole lot of more skin depths to go before the current is presented to the far surface of the steel barrier. And only then does the surface current on the far side of the barrier get to launch a propagating wave. Note that the "opposing fields" you mentioned are on the INSIDE, the near surface, of the barrier. The reflected field is 180 degrees out of phase with the incident field, so, real close to the metal surface, the E-field nulls. OTOH, that reflected wave now goes marching back at you, creating lots of fun with out-of-phase energy pumped back into the original radiating element. Everybody sees bad, bad VSWR. And, since you guys were inside a metal hut, there's even more fun in store for you. Not all that energy goes back into the originating antenna. A lot of it just keeps bouncing around inside the hut, creating 3-D variations in power density. Think of yourself as a potato, slowly cooking. So, to keep this straight, the current that survives Ohmic losses to make it to the far side of the barrier doesn't "greatly attenuate the signal outside the walls". It actually creates the signal (the propagating wave) on the far side of the barrier. We can talk about aperture leakage and re-radiation from barrier impedance discontinuities some other time. But they are not zero. BW, radar is usually pulsed, and in the megawatt to multi-megawatt region for the pulse. Multi-megawatt? Hmm, 10 MW? OK, and maybe a duty cycle of 0.01%? Isn't that 1 kW average? I own a 250 kW X-band radar that will do up to 0.1% duty cycle. I sure wouldn't sit in a metal box with that thing running! I wouldn't even want to be in the boresight of the antenna within a few hundred feet. I was trying to be charitable in assuming that nobody would be so dumb as to fire up a multi-megawatt radar INSIDE a metal hut. Looks like you guys proved me wrong! Ed wb6wsn Ed wb6wsn |
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