Mirage 2000 RDM/RDI/RDY Radars and other avionics

RDM Radar

RDM (Radar Doppler Multimode) can operate in several air-to-air, air-to-ground, and air-to-sea modes, and is standard fit in export Mirage 2000s. The Fr350 million (£33 million) development has been company funded. The first 50 French Air Force air-defence Mirage 2000s will have RDM, but the remaining 150 will have the RDI interception radar. Although RDI design is frozen, this radar will not enter service until 1986. RDI is French Government funded, and 30 per cent of the work is performed by Electronique Serge Dassault (ESD).

In addition to the 200 air-defence Mirage 2000s, the French Air Force expects to buy about 50 deep-penetration 2000Ns. These will carry Aerospatiale ASMP medium-range nuclear-attack missiles, and will have ESD Antelope V terrain-following radars.

RDM performance has been proven by five proto¬types and three pre-production radars—the first flew in January 1980. In air-to-air configuration the pilot selects Doppler or non-Doppler modes according to clutter level. Search patterns are conical "super-search", vertical search, and boresight aiming. The first two use a ±60° search pattern in elevation, and elevation is controlled manually for bore-sight aiming.

Assuming a four-bar search pattern over 120° in azimuth, 90 per cent of 5m2 fighter-aircraft targets will be detected out to 50 n.m. in clear air, according to Thomson-CSF. If a single-bar search pattern is used and azimuthal scan is reduced to 30°, clear-air range extends to 60 n.m. In pulse-Doppler mode, used for looking down into ground clutter, the RDM's range is 20 n.m. with a 120° search pattern.

Thomson-CSF points out that RDM gives an instantaneous range readout as soon as a target is detected. A pre-acquisition track-while-scan phase follows target detection, until the target is 35 n.m. away. Lock-on must be achieved 10 n.m. from the target, but track-while-scan is not available at short range or in pulse-Doppler mode.

For air-to-ground operation, RDM provides a ground map 30° to either side of its centreline. The optional Doppler Beam Sharpening (DBS) unit operates on a sector about 25° wide. As well as being used for inertial-navigation update and for ground-target ranging, RDM has a terrain-avoidance mode in which two clearance planes are shown on the head-down display. Thomson-CSF says that RDM will detect a patrol boat at 60 n.m. with a 120° search pattern when used in anti-ship mode.

RDM's coherent travelling-wave-tube transmitter operates in the X-band. The roll-stabilised inverted-cassegrain antenna has a 655mm diameter and a 3-6° beam-width. The receiver uses digital pulse-compression at long range and constant false-alarm rate digital processing at medium and short ranges. The 245kg weight is distributed among ten line-replaceable units (LRUs), including optional DBS and continuous-wave illuminator units- the latter is for use with the Matra Super 530 air-to-air missile.

Each LRU has its own built-in test equipment, and can be replaced without wire connections or adjustments to the rest of the radar. Thomson quotes 13,000 direct man-hours to produce RDM, leaving out management time.

RDI and RDM installations are interchangeable but they have little in common electronically. RDI uses a higher pulse-repetition frequency for its dedicated interception role. Maximum clear-air range against a head-on fighter target is about 66 n.m., but the RDI's major performance improvement compared with RDM is when looking down. Here, range is between 18 n.m. and 50 n.m., depending on closing speed and degree of clutter.

RDI has taken three years longer to develop than RDM, mainly because of the small space available in the Mirage 2000. This has necessitated the introduction of more hybrid circuits in RDI, but the new, smaller RDI has beer flying since last autumn Thomson now has to validate the tests and get RDI into production.


AA Lookup modes

rdm1.jpg

Lookdown mode

rdm2.jpg

Diagram

rdm3.jpg

1 Master oscillator
2 Power supply
3 Data processor
4 Doppler beam-sharpening unit (option)
5 X-band transmitter
6 72MHz shift unit
7 Continuous-wave illuminator (option)
8 Air-to-air receiver/processor
9 Air-to-ground receiver/processor
10 Antenna servo mechanism
11 Inverted-cassegrain antenna

Sources
  • Flight International, 2 April 1983
 
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Serval RWR

Serval (Systeme d'Ecoute Radar et de Visualisation de l'ALerte) RWR is used on the Mirage 2000. It uses crystal video receivers, covering the E-J bands, and a hybrid analogue-digital processor. Two receiver blocks are in the wingtips, a block is mounted in the tip of the vertical tail, with an omnidirectional low band receiver below the aircraft.

Serval shows target type and direction on a CRT display. It gives a rough range indication from recieved signal strength.

Thales have developed an improved version (Serval NG-D) that uses new software algorithms (involving micro-variations in received parameters )to give accurate range measurement.

Sources
  • Microwave Journal Feb 1998
  • Jane's Avionics 2002
  • Mirage 2000C Flight Manual
 

Attachments

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Antelope 5/50 radar modes from 1992:

Antilope 5 and Antilope 50 possess six different modes:

Terrain Following (suivi de terrain), the radar sees up to 7 nm in front of the plane, allowing a 600kt speed at 200ft

Ground Mapping (cartographie), enables two submodes: VISUSOL gives a 160° (+/- 80°) map with 1/250,000 or 1/1,000,000 scales, while RESOL enables to magnify a part of the map from 2 to 50 times

Terrain Following + Ground Mapping (mode entrelacé)

Ground Target Ranging (télémétrie), effective range 8nm

Air-to-air (air-air), range 16nm, 160° wide sweeping, BoreSight and Slew submodes possible

Air-to-sea (air-surface), comparable to Ground Mapping

Source: Wildcat's post at F-16.net forum
http://www.f-16.net/f-16_forum_viewtopic-t-1872-postdays-0-postorder-asc-start-15.html
 
Doppler filtering techniques in turn appeared on airborne radars, driven by the need to detect targets in the “clutter” of the ground, for interceptions at low altitude. Attempts to visualize the moving targets carried out on the CYRANO IVs, by working on the magnetron transmitter to improve its stability and by using coherent oscillators to copy and memorize at each recurrence the phase of the signals emitted, were not crowned with success. despite the efforts made.

It was again the need for export competitiveness that led Thomson - CSF to embark on the development of airborne pulse doppler radars, actions initiated and led by Jean Claude Marchais and Philippe Lacomme, under the direction of Henri Poinsard, who led to the development and production, from 1983, of the RDM radar: Multifunction Doppler Radar.

Of “classic” design, with low repetition frequency like the CYRANO, its innovation mainly concerned the choice of a coherent transmission-reception chain, based on a TWT transmitter, of peak and average power comparable to those of the Cyrano IV, compatible with good quality Doppler filtering. Interesting results could then be obtained: a range of a few tens of kilometers in the clutter, nevertheless limited by the spread of the spectrum of fixed echoes linked to the movement of the aircraft, specific to airborne radars.

The system aspect of this radar had also been particularly studied, in particular thanks to the use of digital techniques in the processing and exploitation of the signal, to develop its multi-purpose multi-target capacities: air - air and air - ground, by exploiting at better the flexibility of its TWT transmitter and the mobility of its inverted Cassegrain antenna.

The RDMs met with some success, in particular that of equipping the first MIRAGE 2000 squadron in Dijon in 1985, due to the unavailability of the RDI developed for the Air Force. There were 238 pieces produced, mainly for export.

However, the performance in airborne detection in the presence of ground clutter depends on the choice of pulse doppler radars with high repetition frequency, as proposed at ESD, Gérard Thouvenel. However, lulled by its previous successes, France did not immediately measure the lead taken by the Americans in this area. So it was without prior studies or experiments that the development of RDI: Pulse Doppler Radar, to use these principles, was launched at Thomson CSF, under an STTA contract.

The technological leaps necessary to make this radar successful mainly concerned:

  • The quality of the secondary lobes of its antenna, which led to the choice of a flat slot guide antenna, in which the major difficulty to be overcome was to supply the transmission antenna and the formation of the monopulse channels of the as simple as possible, to preserve the lightness of the whole and to maintain the speed of the antenna movements necessary for multi-target pursuits.
  • Control of the stability of the signals emitted and of the spectral purity of the pilot oscillators, necessary for the quality of Doppler processing, and this despite the proximity of natural disruptive digital processing circuits.
  • The design of high performance Doppler filters with sufficient dynamics, in particular for the rejection of the “main clutter”, greater than useful echoes of around 80 decibels.
  • The generalization of digital calculation techniques, at this stage in wired circuits, for speed filtering, signal processing and information exploitation. All digital processing required a few hundred million operations per second.

These radars were produced in 133 copies, from 1986, solely for the needs of the Air Force.

Source: http://radars-darricau.fr/livre/2-PDF/histoire.pdf
 
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Aviation Week, 7 April 1980


Bretigny sur Orge, France—Dassault- Breguet will begin delivering Mirage 2000 fighters to the French air force in mid- 1982, equipped with a multimission ground attack radar because the originally specified air-superiority radar will not be available until 1985.

Revised plans call for an air-superiority retrofit program that will begin sometime in 1985, according to officials at the governmental flight test center here, where the aircraft is being evaluated.

Air force officials said the retrofit would be done on only some of the aircraft delivered before the new radar becomes available. Deliveries are scheduled to reach a rate of 2-4 a month, so the French air force could have at least 84 of the new fighters by the end of 1985.

First Mirage 2000 units were planned to fill the air defense role and were due to go into service in 1983 (AW&ST Apr. 25, 1977, p. 33).

Air defense versions of the fighter were to be equipped with a radar system optimized for air interception at all altitudes. Prime responsibility for the system, designated the RDI, was awarded to Thomson CSF in conjunction with Electronique Marcel Dassault.

Penetration versions of the Mirage 2000 were to receive a terrain-following radar called the Antilope 5. The Dassault subsidiary was given the lead role in development in cooperation with Thomson.

At about the time Thomson began work on the two requested systems, it also began to develop a third type of radar for the aircraft. This is a more general purpose system, now designated the RDM. RDM is designed for export to countries that do not want to dedicate such an aircraft to specific missions.

Although the Antilope 5 is expected to be ready on schedule in 1986, RDI development has slipped behind schedule. Rather than have no radar at all, the French air force therefore decided to accept the RDM for the first Mirage 2000 units. There are two reasons for delays in the RDI program: the need for more time than originally anticipated for certain phases of development and a French air force request six months ago for two improvements to the system.

In the first category, the main delay occurred during the testing phase. “We simply underestimated the time needed to see how the RDI would operate in a real environment and the time it would take to modify and optimize the processor to get rid of ground clutter in the look-down mode,” a Thomson official said.

All of these modifications involved software changes. “In general, there was a high volume of software activity and this took us longer than we originally anticipated,” the oflicial said.

Delays occurred while Thomson was trying to miniaturize the RDI signal processor. A few problems were encountered in applying an already developed technique of microwave frequency microelectronics. This last area caused more of a problem for the development of the RDM.

Thomson officials were pleased with the results of the first test flight of the RDI system on a Dassault-Breguet Falcon 20. In the air-to-air mode, “we obtained a performance that was within 10% of what we expected,” one company official said. "We now know that in principle, there was no mistake. We know it will be within specifications when we deliver it and we will not ask for any reduction in specs.”

In the second category, one modification the air force requested was an enhanced dogfight capability. This required adding a function that automatically disengages the antenna roll-stabilizing mechanism at close range.

This change relates to improvements in the missiles that will equip the Mirage 2000. Matra’s short-range Magic 550 is being fitted with a new seeker that greatly expands the missile’s attack envelope. Presently, it can only be fired from a position in a 180-deg. arc aft of the target. The new seeker expands this arc to 320 deg. Matra also has an improved semi-active seeker for its longer-range Super 530
missile.

A second requested modification is the addition of an automatic switching system between two modes. It allows the pilot to use the air to-ground mode while still searching for hostile aircraft in the air-to- air mode.

Because these requested modifications “meant a delay of only a few months,” the French air force was willing to accept them, one Thomson official said. “If it had meant a delay of a year, they were not prepared to accept them.”

Company officials counter criticism of delays on their part by saying there always has been a gap between the delivery of the aircraft and the delivery of both the RDI and the Antilope 5. They also said the air force did not realize at the outset of the Mirage 2000 program that it would take longer to develop an entirely new radar than it would to develop the new airframe.

Asked why the company was able to deliver its private-venture, export RDM system more than two years before its joint-venture RDI radar, Thomson officials said the RDM essentially is an outgrowth of its Cyrano family of radars - RDM originally was called Cyrano 500.

RDI is an X-band pulse Doppler radar with a high pulse repetition frequency (AWSLST Dec. 4, 1978, p. 64). It has a digital signal processor and incorporates electronics to identify hostile aircraft (IFF).

RDM is a low PRF X-band system. Its inverted Cassegrain antenna system, derived from the Cyrano family of radars.

RDI and RDM have about the same head-on attack performance at high altitude, but the RDM has less capability at low altitude and less range in the lookdown mode. However, RDM has a range on the order of 50-60 naut. mi. compared to 10 naut. mi. for the RDI in the terrain mapping mode,” Thomson said.

Irrespective of whether the aircraft is equipped with the RDI, RDM or Antilope 5 system, radar information will be presented on a Penetron heads-down unit. “This will make the Mirage 2000 the first combat aircraft with a color display system,” a Thomson oflicial said. The company, which also builds the Mirage 2000 head-up display, is licensing Bendix to build the Penetron system in the U. S.
 
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RDM and RDI as not closely related technologically. Is RDY related to RDI or is it another independent branch. I understand the first RDY prototypes are from before RDI was in service.
 
An evolution of the RDI, the RDY was in turn developed by Thomson - CSF for the needs of export. Produced from 1992, it differs from the RDI by:
  • An evolution of its antenna and its rotary joint bringing a simplification and a lightening of moving parts.
  • The use of a “dual peak” transmitter (increased average power, two peak powers switches), resulting from a study funded by the DRET (Direction des Recherches Etudes and Techniques), allowing it to function equally well at low repetition frequency like the RDM for the air - ground functions, in high repetition frequency like the RDI and medium repetition frequency, for air-air functions.
  • The use of pulse compression in air - ground mode low repetition frequency, a first in France for weapon aircraft radars.
  • the evolution of digital signal processing by the use of circuits programmed in microcircuit technology, allowed it to reach the necessary calculation speeds - billions of operations per second.

The RDY is now in production for the Mirage 2000-5 and 2000-9. He brought back the France at the best world level in the field. Over 200 RDYs were produced.
 
RDM and RDI as not closely related technologically. Is RDY related to RDI or is it another independent branch. I understand the first RDY prototypes are from before RDI was in service.

RDM was derived from old tech Cyrano IV for the first 37 Mirage 2000s: IOC at Dijon in July 1984. And it wasn't very good. Not even Super 530F capability, only Magic short range AAM: so inferior to the Mirage F1C-200s.

RDI was the true pulse doppler technological leap able to guide Super 530D.

RDY was a massive update using RBE-2 technology (early PESA) able to guide MICA fire and forget AAMs: the 2000-5 update was (opportunistically) applied to the surviving RDM Mirage 2000s. Which went for backward to top notch.
 

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