Thanks for the details. I have two questions that may be dumb:
1. If you were the lead designer of an EW package for the JF-17, how many watts of power would you "want" for your EW suite? I know this is a super vague question but I am asking for a ballpark figure. I have little idea how much power these things soak up.
My reply will be more than that since all power specs are not available for comparison and i will use common terms while keeping techie jargon to min.
AESA Radar
Starting with AESA radar, depending upon T/R modules, considering an example that 4 x TR modules are mounted on a 2.5 centimetre cube giving a density of about 3,000 modules per square metre, once mounting brackets are factored in. Each TR module has a peak power of about 10 W with an average power of about 2 W; therefore a square metre of TR modules will have a peak power of about 30 kW and an average power of about 6 kW.
Some radars in use:
Irbis E PESA Radar: 20 kW peak power
APG-79 AESA Radar: 15-16 kW peak power (estimated)
APG-81 AESA Radar: 17 kW peak power
Considering a shorter range of KLJ-7 or KLJ-A, the peak power would be lesser than above stated and average power even smaller. Aircraft's radar is a diverse topic and i will come to it again in another post.
Jamming Pods
Maximum Power ranges from 6 - 11 Kw such as AN/ALQ 99 jamming pod used on EA-18 Growler. The ALQ-99 offers several noise/spot-noise jamming modes and may have other capabilities such as false target generation. Keeping weight in view, ALQ-99 with pod is is 950lb, 2 are carried, one for Hi-Band and one for Low-Band.
2 Pods = 2 hard points.
Russians use KHIBINY pods which have dual role: ECM+Jamming. specs are not available. It is said that KHIBINY Pods are for individual aircraft protection, till
Tarantul ECM pod is introduced which could be used for air group cover, means more Kw in it.
Power management in this case refers to the allocation of available jamming power in such a way that the greatest threats receive the most power and are thus most strongly degraded.
Probably a Low, mid and High band- all in one pod could be useful.
Radar Warning Receiver
RWR detects and prioritizes(cues) enemy radars threatening the aircraft. When mated with a jamming pod, the system provides the ability to jam high power surveillance, acquisition and tracking radars. When the RWR detects threats, the computer sorts them and the jammer jams them.
EA-18 G uses AN/ALQ-218 Radar Warning Receiver / Electronic Support Measures / Electronic Intelligence (RWR/ESM/ELINT) Sensor System. Basically 3 in 1 system. Since ALQ-218 has additional capabilities than a normal RWR, this pod is carried on a separate hard point. Can be housed in gun area. It can also be made capable to transfer data to other platforms.
Bear in mind that another installation needs to take place if such a pod is used; the receiver for this pod needs to be installed behind the AESA radar, so enough nose space needs to be available.
Track Breaker
These are designed to break enemy lock-on and to give false information. It provides simultaneous protection against pulse ranging, FM-CW, conical, and monopulse radar in different ways, based on each method’s angle and range. e.g ALQ 41.
Wireless Communication Jamming
The Russians used a system called Leer-3 on a UAV for jamming mobile communication. It is also a ground based system. Its designed to locate electromagnetic emission sources and suppress wireless communications, including cellphones, within a 3.7-mile (+6 kilometers) radius and control range of 60 km. Basically its intended for the monitoring of GSM communication networks, the determination of system identifiers of mobile stations and their locations, and the transmission of obtained data.
Targeting / FLIR Pod
A SEAD/EW aircraft will need a targeting pod if it carries an AR Missile. Wild Weasel F-16 Block 50 carries HARM targeting system (HTS) pod for firing HAR missiles.
U.S. focuses on the F-16 Block 50 Wild Weasel as HARM shooters, the EA-18G as radar jammers, and the EC-130H Compass Call as communication jammers as combined force to suppress or limit an enemy’s IADS. This shows that EW/SEAD/DEAD is not the job of one aircraft. It could be F-35 and F-22 combo in future.
2. Is there a good book I can read to get the fundamentals of this sort of thing? Or is it one of those topics you need to read about from a lot of different sources? I'm a control systems engineer so you know where I'll be jumping off from.
EW 101.
Search in PDF format. I posted the link a month back, cant find it now.