randomradio
BANNED
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2016
- Messages
- 6,974
- Reaction score
- -17
- Country
- Location
Does not matter if I am 'unhappy' with your claim or not. What matter is that you back up your claim.
Lol. I already told you, common sense says, if the Raptor is so good and it still couldn't kill the Rafale, then it's obvious the ROE favoured the Rafale. Why is this so hard to get?
Holy shit...!!! Now we are definitely into 'Indian physics' territory. The cellphone itself is moving at pedestrian speed, therefore, the EM signals that go from tower to tower to satellites must be moving at the same pedestrian speed, therefore, SPECRAT can differentiate these signals from an AESA LPI radar signal.
Folks...There is no arguing against this.
What crap. Again, you are just making shit up and insinuating I said it.
The Rafale can easily track a source. All the towers are fixed, so once Spectra localises the source, and figures out the source isn't moving, it's not going to identify it as a fighter aircraft. It's as simple as that.
So SPECRAT can counter without creating a countermeasure signal.
Nothing is being created.
More 'Indian physics'. Your fellow Indians on this forum are hanging their heads in shame, pal.
Real physics.
I doubt you know how a waveguide works.
https://www.electronics-notes.com/a...rs-transmission-lines/waveguide-junctions.php
What design? Aperture size? Length? Material? Which end is inlet/outlet? SPECRAT as claimed by you is supposed to radiate in any direction, so explain to the forum how many waveguides can a pod of X-Y-Z dimensions that can accommodate 360 deg coverage.
This I have to see.
As I said, none of those I listed are possibly used in Spectra. All I did is show proof that phase shifting is possible without using sampling.
Give it a rest. You tried to pass off military electronics as something 'exotic' like in the movies. Now you got caught with your ignorance pants down your ankles.
All I see is you making excuses. You are confusing easily available electronics with exotic electronics. There are electronics that the US wouldn't give ToT to for license production, those are exotic electronics.
in theory you could make exotic semiconductors. I doubt Russia has the ability to make them.
In USA there is more emphasis in general on cost, reliability and supply chain. That means a lot of systems are COTS. During the cold war products for the military drove innovation in civilian sector. After the cold war ended it is the other way around.
To say the Russian commercial semiconductor sector is less sophisticated than their Western counterparts is an understatement
India uses COTS processors using Silicon, while also makes Gallium processors for strategic purposes. And these Gallium processors, they are more or less the same as the COTS processors, but are exotic in the sense not anybody can simply walk into a shop and buy it.
Most of these processors are based on Western designs anyway. So there is no such thing as the Russians not having the ability to make them.