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DBpedia 2016-04

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Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The AN/FPS-24 Radar was a Long Range Search Radar used by the United States Air Force Air Defense Command.General Electric built this frequency diverse (FD) long range search radar designed to operate in the Very High Frequency (VHF) at 214 to 236 MHz. There were problems with this radar at the test site at Eufaula AFS (Eufaula, Alabama) in 1960. These problems required many modifications.Additional problems occurred when deployment was attempted in 1961 with the first production model at Point Arena Air Force Station in California. When the radar finally deployed, bearing problems often occurred due to the 85.5-ton antenna weight. Failures of the 9-foot hydrostatic bearing often caused the early closure of some sites due to catastrophic damage to the support tower, sail, and feed horn.Twelve systems were built between 1958 and 1962. The prototype at Eufaula, Alabama, was perched atop a steel lattice structure tower of shorter (but unconfirmed) height. Depending on the location it was to be deployed in operational production, the radar antenna (sail) itself was perched atop one of two different towers: a cast-in-place concrete tower or a metal-sided steel-framed tower both with equal dimensions of 84'6\" in height and side dimensions of 60'3\" square (63'3\" square when including the thickness of corner buttresses). This tower design was also used for the AN/FPS-35 frequency diverse SAGE search radar built by Sperry Corporation. The FPS-24 radar antenna sail rotated between 5 to 6 revolutions per minute (depending on wind conditions) and was often the cause of microwave interference reported by nearby residents who could hear the radar signal in television and radio broadcasts. At some locations, the radar signal was \"blanked\" as it passed over television broadcast antenna sites such as Mt. Loma Prieta in the Santa Cruz Mountains, California. However, at DEFCON 3 or higher, the signal was ordered \"unblanked\" in all directions. The 7.5 Megawatt (maximum power) transmitter ran in normal operation at 5 Megawatt output pulse (nearly 20 microseconds in duration) and was conveyed from the transmitter to the antenna feed horn via a 9-inch diameter rigid coaxial connector. The feed horn consisted of a cross dipole antenna design for both A and B channels."@en }

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