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From: Frank Gilliland on Dec 19, 1:28 pm
On 19 Dec 2005 10:38:46 -0800, wrote in From: Frank Gilliland on Dec 18, 6:54 pm The AN/PRC-104 HF manpack transceiver (operational 1986, will be replaced soon by an updated unit) by Hughes Ground Systems has an automatic antenna tuner integral to the manpack R/T. One can physically shorten the whip by removing sections to cut down visibility and the antenna tuner will compensate for the shorter sections. Won't be quite as efficient as the full whip but it is less visible on the ground. The lil 20 W PEP transmitter will shove as much RF into the whip as it can without damaging itself. We had the PRC-104 in the early '80s; the RT was used as the exciter for the MRC-109/110 (400/1000W) jeep radios. Mechanical push-button tuning from 2-30 MHz. I still want one. I'm not familiar with the MRC-109 or MRC-110, but a reference on C4I has that compatible with the AN/VRC-49 which is FM in the 30 to 76 MHz region. The AN/PRC-104 basic R/T was used in the AN/GRC-213, a vehicle mount configuration with audio amplifier and DC vehicle power supply conditioning, 20 W PEP SSB output. The AN/GRC-193 is also for vehicle mounting, uses the basic R/T, but includes a 100/400 Watt linear amplifier for transmitter and a higher- power antenna coupler/tuner. The basic R/T has digit push-wheel frequency selection (like digit thumbwheels but with a single button mover). The AN/VRC-11 through AN/VRC-49 had, variously, 10 push-button or rotary switch selection of frequencies in the 30 to 76 MHz region, FM, and were compatible with the AN/PRC-25 and -77 VHF FM sets. The lower number VRCs I've seen all have chromed push buttons, something left over from WW2. :-) The latest is an RF psycho weapon using ultra-wideband microwave stuff to scare-shock-disturb unfriendlies at a distance. First operational test contract was awarded a couple months ago. While it uses radio, it might not be handled by signalmen at all, probably not by artillery types either. Psy-war units? :-) I heard about that a couple years ago. Not a psych weapon -- it causes significant "discomfort" in the eyes and skin at a distance. It is/was intended for domestic purposes (i.e, riot control -- make sure to wear your aluminum-foil hat to the upcoming anti-war rallies). I'll have to get out my aluminized Nomex full-body suit! :-) The "riot control" version was an R&D model. DoD has upped the ante with a fieldable system contract awarded for testing on whoever wherever they want to try it. The first NODs (Night Observation Devices) were operational during the latter half of the 1960s and used in Vietnam. Too many were stolen/captured with the USSR making their own versions. Now those "Buck Rogers" devices can be bought at sports stores as a regular consumer electronics product. shrug Yeah, I have a Soviet unit that takes 2 AA batteries. Hmmmm..... In 1967 the U.S. military had three field models of NODs. Electro-Optical Systems division of Xerox in Pasadena produced one of those models. Three were stolen/turned-up-mission that year, feds in there asking questions after. The production manager "resigned." I have no idea where those missing NODs wound up but I read reports in 1970 where the USSR military now had them. First ones were "blotchy" in imaging and sensitivity didn't have any automatic gain control but they could enable anyone to "own the night." They have improved considerably since 1967. |
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