PPRuNe Forums

PPRuNe Forums (https://www.pprune.org/)
-   Military Aviation (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation-57/)
-   -   MH370 and military primary radar. (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/536138-mh370-military-primary-radar.html)

Lord Lucan 16th Mar 2014 14:06

MH370 and military primary radar.
 
Please excuse a non military type on your forum, but I have a question to ask, and the thread is just too insane over there on Rumours&News.

If MH370 did in fact turn back and overfly the Malaysian peninsular into the Indian Ocean, transponder off, is it conceivable they were not seen by the Malaysian Air Force, or other military radar?

I realise air defence is a sensitive matter, but what is the opinion here?

Dr Jekyll 16th Mar 2014 14:20

Appropriate user name for the circumstances I must say.

thing 16th Mar 2014 14:34

A 777 is a big lump of tin, any civil or miltary radar would have seen it. All the transponder does is identify the blip. As usual with cases of this sort for people with an aviation background listening to the idiots on the news is painful.

Lord Lucan 16th Mar 2014 14:44

Having a great number of years in the business I know a 777 can be detected.

I am more interested if it is possible that it wasn't.

thing 16th Mar 2014 15:19

Radar is radar at the end of the day, doesn't matter whether it's mil or civvy, same as dynamite, both versions go bang. I'm not sure what you're driving at when you say 'is it possible that it wasn't detected?' If it was in radar range then yes it would be detected unless it had some Klingon cloaking device. But if you are in the business then you already know that surely.

ian16th 16th Mar 2014 15:45


Radar is radar at the end of the day
It does apprear that the civilians depend much more on transponder information than the military. The military might want to make their own decisions about what type of a/c a target is, rather than depend on what the target tells you it is.

But I stopped being a Radar Fitter in 1965 and things might have changed since then
:)

Fox3WheresMyBanana 16th Mar 2014 15:57

The most useful info appears to be in this Reuters article.

Exclusive: Radar data suggests missing Malaysia plane deliberately flown way off course - sources | Reuters

This Time of India report is also relevant

Radar suggests missing Malaysian jet changed its course more than once - The Times of India

The relevant Malaysian military radar sites appear to be at Kota Bharu and Butterworth.

MH 370 is reported now to have been routing between named waypoints. Your most likely options are:
1) it was detected on military radar, but not deemed a threat due to its routing, and therefore not investigated.
2) it was detected, deemed a threat but not identified.
3) it was not detected, or not detected often enough to generate a reliable track

All of the reasons for the above would make the Malaysian authorities look bad. Questions might include:
What was the system serviceability and effective coverage?
Was this an operator or command cock-up?
Do they co-ordinate with the civilians, including flight plans?
Do their systems include transponder codes?
Do they have an effective Quick Reaction Alert?

I suspect the details are coming out now because they are reviewing the radar recordings but only now realise what they need to look for.

My best guess is that they routinely ignore civilian traffic routing between named waypoints. They will absolutely not wish to admit this, especially if it is known that they do so, as whoever was flying the jet may have planned for this.

Lord Lucan 16th Mar 2014 16:03


Radar is radar at the end of the day, doesn't matter whether it's mil or civvy, same as dynamite, both versions go bang. I'm not sure what you're driving at when you say 'is it possible that it wasn't detected?' If it was in radar range then yes it would be detected unless it had some Klingon cloaking device. But if you are in the business then you already know that surely.
Well, it's a long time since I have been in an ATC or military radar room, that's why I'm asking. I thought primary radar returns are not displayed on current civilian ATC radars, at least not in normal operations. So civilian radar may not have noticed.

Military air defence radars however.... That is what I am getting at.

Is it possible the Air-force sometimes is asleep, or have lost the tapes? Was the only radar switched off and they were all down the local brothel? I have no idea as to the extent of Malaysia's air defence capabilities. I thought someone here might know.

thing 16th Mar 2014 16:04


It does apprear that the civilians depend much more on transponder information than the military.
Possibly true, but the OP question was 'Was it possible for it not to be detected?' The simple answer is if it was in radar range then yes, it was. Let's not get into atmospheric aberration, whether there was an N in the month and all of the other good stuff.

I agree with Fox, there's some serious backpedalling going on.

Edit: Sorry LL, just caught your post. ATC do show non transponding traffic, although I can only speak for certain about the UK and Western Europe. Why would they not want to show non transponding traffic? If anything they are going to be the bigger proximity threat precisely because you don't know their height, where they are heading etc. Go flying any time in the UK and you will have ATC warning you about 'Unidentified traffic, no height information.'

Fox3WheresMyBanana 16th Mar 2014 16:16

Just found this: David Learmount at FlightGlobal reckons it was a cock-up by the Malaysian military also:
MH370: Malaysia's military failed in their duty says expert | Plane Talking

Worth noting that, at that time of night, there is no Swiss QRA (they start at 6am I believe - easy life:ok:)

Sun Who 16th Mar 2014 16:31

Many air traffic systems around the world, including some in the UK, do not show non-squawking aircraft to the controller. This is particularly true for civilian controllers monitoring the upper air, who may only be presented with symbology derived from secondary surveillance systems, not even 'raw' secondary returns.

Sun.

thing 16th Mar 2014 16:57


Many air traffic systems around the world, including some in the UK, do not show non-squawking aircraft to the controller. This is particularly true for civilian controllers monitoring the upper air, who may only be presented with symbology derived from secondary surveillance systems, not even 'raw' secondary returns.
Thanks for that, I learn again from Pprune. Why would you not want to see non transponding aircraft? Would it just overload the controller?

Can't say I've ever flown in an area where only transponding traffic was shown otherwise I wouldn't get non transponding traffic as conflicts! However, I rarely venture into the oxygen starved areas of the airspace.

ORAC 16th Mar 2014 17:19

Wrong question.

Would it have been tracked from shortly after take-off until it left radar cover - yes. It would have been identified as a friendly based on it's SSR squawk and associated flight plan and had a friendly track label associated with it which would have stayed with it based on primary radar when the SSR was turned off.

Would the fact that the SSR was turned off and the aircraft then turned back have caused an alert? Perhaps. It was already identified as friendly and the turn back could have been assumed to be related to an aircraft electrical problem; however a prolonged deviation from the flight plan route should have triggered at least a conversation with the local ATC centre as to the problem and intentions.

Once over land it probably entered a no-track area (spurious plots associated with ground clutter and local movements are a nuisance) and the track label would have been automatically dropped. From that point it would have just been another assumed friendly overland track.

MPN11 16th Mar 2014 17:21

When I was controlling (military) in the UK Upoer Airpace (above FL245) it was a mandatory control environment. So everyone there was being controlled by someone. Ergo, anything below 245 was just screen clutter, and thus on the T-82 radar we could operate in "Beam 6" and thus filter out all the medium and lower level stuff.

Drop below 245, and we would operate in "All Beams" to ensure we saw any possible conflicts. Then, if needed, we would use the height finder to determine the height if the conflict ... 5.000 FT vertical separation being required.

Any SSR data was a bonus, allowing coordination with the relevant controlling agency (if showing).

Lima Juliet 16th Mar 2014 17:26

Yup, I agree, civvies tend to use SSR-only to declutter their picture. :ok:

I would hope the civil commercial aviation world takes a long hard look at itself after this. I would hope they ask the following:

1. Why is there an over reliance on SSR and not primary RADAR?
2. Why isn't there a procedure for contacting the aircraft when they don't check in on frequency?
3. When there is no contact then why didn't the air traffic service start to look with primary? The average airliner does around 8 miles a minute - so no contact after 5 minutes then start looking out by 50 miles!
4. Is it ETOPS safe or should we have more crew and engines on a single aircraft?
5. Is the use of an aircraft slide really sufficient as a life-raft following ditching?

LJ

Tankertrashnav 16th Mar 2014 17:26

I know it is fashionable on this forum to rubbish David Learmount and anything he says, but I have to say I pretty well agree with what he is saying about this. Everything points to a huge cock-up on the part of the RMAF radar, which their authorities have been covering up because of this inevitable "face" thing. If I were a Malaysian taxpayer I'd be asking what the heck is the use of operating highly expensive Su 30s, Mig 29s and F18s if unidentified aircraft can fly unchallenged across the country's airspace?

thing 16th Mar 2014 17:31


Yup, I agree, civvies tend to use SSR-only to declutter their picture
So if a civ airliner looses it's transponder for whatever reason then it just disappears? Even though there must be a primary return somewhere in the system even if it's being blocked out? I find that incredible.

Lord Lucan 16th Mar 2014 17:58

ORAC, Am I correct in thinking that you believe it is possible that it was not tracked, - or rather, it is possible that it would not have raised any military interest?

And I presume the radar data is recorded and preserved, so would it not have been reviewed within hours?

And what would be the military interest when the now unidentified return appears from the overland clutter when the aircraft coasts out into the Indian Ocean?

MPN11 16th Mar 2014 18:27

As a generality I would say that reliance on SSR data since the 70s, by ATC certainly, has diminished the ability to work with minimal data. Think Word Processor VS. Pen, email VS. Letter.

I've had numerous situations when handing over aircraft to another Mil ATCO to hear bleats such as "I don't have a flight plan for him" or "I can't see his squawk". All one actually needs is a primary return, in the right location on tne right heading, for identification from another controller. Then just "Take 5" or coordinate - it's not that difficult.

Sadly, automation now seems to require innumerable additional bells and whistles to achieve a safe, orderly and expeditious flow of air traffic.

[/rant] :p

Trim Stab 16th Mar 2014 19:10

I read elsewhere that the Indian Navy had turned off their primary radar, which is why they had no trace. Apparently too expensive to run their radar permanently at times when there is no threat. Possibly also the RMAF had their primary radar switched off.


All times are GMT. The time now is 00:09.


Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.