What
FLEASWTRACENPAC = Fleet Antisubmarine Warfare Training Center, Pacific
There was a SciFi story quite a while beck named “A Hawk Among the Sparrows” by Dean McLaughlin.
from here.
A good read and makes the point that the radar guided missiles could not lock on to the small amount of metal in the WW I aircraft. Additionally he was hindered by the enormous amount of kerosene required to fuel his craft for even one short flight.
A story, sure, but based on the missiles of perhaps the early 60, plausible.
Radar reflects against anything, not just metal - how do you think British huff-duff installations picked up German air raids during WW2 ? Modern air control radars routinely pick up birds, meteo balloons and so on ; although normally civilian air control radars automatically filter out anything that doesn’t have a transponder broadcasting “Hello, I’m an airplane !”
The same is true of a fighter’s onboard radar : in normal operation it’ll only display echoes that are bigger than size X, go faster than speed Y and are between altitudes X and Z to limit cluttering, but the pilot can adjust the settings if need be.
My WAG is that the missile might have a spectral filter tuned to block out certain wavelengths like sunlight and sunlight reflections.
What he needs is DICNAVAB (Dictionary of Naval Abbreviations).
And ASAP!
My WAG is that the sun gives off a particular heat signature based on the time of day and location of launch, and the guidance system knows to look for, then ignore it.
Anyone know some facts about this?
Not sure if it is what you’re interested in, but you might want to see here :