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Turkey receives first Koral land-based EW system
Lale Sariibrahimoglu, Ankara - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
25 February 2016
http://www.janes.com/article/58326/turkey-receives-first-koral-land-based-ew-system
Turkey formally received its first Koral EW system from Aselsan on 22 February. Source: SSM
The Turkish Air Force officially received its first locally designed Koral land-based mobile electronic warfare (EW) system from Aselsan on 22 February.
According to an information note released by the Turkish Undersecretariat for Defence Industries (SSM) on 22 February, Koral is able to search for, intercept, analyse, classify, and find the direction of multiple conventional and complex type of radar signals. It also has the capability to jam, deceive, and paralyse hostile radars. It can either be set to automatically respond to hostile signals or it can present suggested options to an operator.
Koral was developed by Aselsan for Turkey under the Land Based Stand-off Jammer System project, which was contracted in July 2009.
A complete Koral EW system includes four Koral Electronic Support Systems (ED) and one Electronic Attack System (ET), each mounted on an 8x8 truck. The vehicles can be up to 500 m away from each other, communicating via fibre-optic cables. The system is reported to have an operating range of 100 km, although no official operating specifications have been issued by Turkey.
Speaking during the handover ceremony, SSM head Ismail Demir said, "We've seen how important electronic warfare is in recent wars." He added that he hoped Koral would lead to the development of an Airborne Stand-off Jammer too. The Turkish Air Force is currently evaluating proposals for such a system, with options including commissioning Aselsan to create one or purchasing one from abroad
Land-Based Transportable Radar Electronic Attack System
ASELSANCapabilitiesElectronic Warfare Systems
Facebook'ta Paylaş Twitter'da Paylaş E-Posta İle Gönder Çıktı Al Contact
http://www.aselsan.com.tr/en-us/cap...-transportable-radar-electronic-attack-system
Land-Based Transportable Radar Electronic Attack System is developed to jam and deceive conventional and complex type of hostile radars.
General Features
Lale Sariibrahimoglu, Ankara - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
25 February 2016
http://www.janes.com/article/58326/turkey-receives-first-koral-land-based-ew-system
Turkey formally received its first Koral EW system from Aselsan on 22 February. Source: SSM
The Turkish Air Force officially received its first locally designed Koral land-based mobile electronic warfare (EW) system from Aselsan on 22 February.
According to an information note released by the Turkish Undersecretariat for Defence Industries (SSM) on 22 February, Koral is able to search for, intercept, analyse, classify, and find the direction of multiple conventional and complex type of radar signals. It also has the capability to jam, deceive, and paralyse hostile radars. It can either be set to automatically respond to hostile signals or it can present suggested options to an operator.
Koral was developed by Aselsan for Turkey under the Land Based Stand-off Jammer System project, which was contracted in July 2009.
A complete Koral EW system includes four Koral Electronic Support Systems (ED) and one Electronic Attack System (ET), each mounted on an 8x8 truck. The vehicles can be up to 500 m away from each other, communicating via fibre-optic cables. The system is reported to have an operating range of 100 km, although no official operating specifications have been issued by Turkey.
Speaking during the handover ceremony, SSM head Ismail Demir said, "We've seen how important electronic warfare is in recent wars." He added that he hoped Koral would lead to the development of an Airborne Stand-off Jammer too. The Turkish Air Force is currently evaluating proposals for such a system, with options including commissioning Aselsan to create one or purchasing one from abroad
Land-Based Transportable Radar Electronic Attack System
ASELSANCapabilitiesElectronic Warfare Systems
Facebook'ta Paylaş Twitter'da Paylaş E-Posta İle Gönder Çıktı Al Contact
http://www.aselsan.com.tr/en-us/cap...-transportable-radar-electronic-attack-system
Land-Based Transportable Radar Electronic Attack System is developed to jam and deceive conventional and complex type of hostile radars.
General Features
- Designed to intercept and jam and/or deceive hostile radar emitters. It analyses multi-target signals and automatically/manually generates an appropriate response.
- Wide operating frequency range
- Multiple target capability
- Wide-band digital receiver for signal detection, discrimination and reproduction
- DRFM based deception capability
- Up to %100 duty cycle
- High power RF amplifiers and directive transmit antennas to allow high ERP
- Independent transmit antenna for each amplifier
- Each antenna can be steered separately
- Look-through capability
- Integral threat and technique libraries
- Single operator, single vehicle
- High reliability and high availability
- Ruggedized for use in harsh environments
- Modular architecture to allow easy customization
- System-in-test and Built-in-test capability
- Local or remote control
- Secure voice and data communications with other EW systems
Put simply, KORAL - or any ground based ECM system for that matter - is of very limited use in terms of protecting high-altitude aircraft against S-400.
The ESAs S-400 radars use would "see" the radar return from aircraft, the noise from the ground is extremely easy to filter out by any ESA since it "knows" the signal source.
To beat it from the ground against airborne target, the ECM system has to output WAY more powerful signal than the original radar, and it is always too late since it receives the signal (and hence learns the frequency to counter) when the aircraft already got illuminated.
Ground base ECMs are jus that; ground-based. They can protect themselves and mess with radars targeting ground, but are of limited use for protecting aircraft; that's what air-based ECM is for.
It can technically try to mess with guidance for missiles already launched (with somewhat greater chance compared to near-zero chance of preventing detection and tracking) but given S-400 has both active-guided and semiactive-guided missiles, it's not really feasible.
However, it does make certain sense, as in, while it's pretty ineffective on its own, it's an extra ECM source in addition to ECM suite the target aircraft carries.
And Turkish F-16s actually have the latest American one:http://www.f-16.net/f-16_users_article21.htmlhttp://wiki.scramble.nl/index.php/BAE_Systems_AN/ALQ-178
So basically if it comes to that, it will be a direct comparison between S-400 and latest American airborne ECM. If the ECM wins, then it would probably cause a panic and significant rework of all Russian SAMs. If S-400 wins, expect lots of usual "needs lots of money our F-16 would be dropping like flies" speeches for Congress in US.