Everything Radio Book: Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)
Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)

Everything Radio Book: Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)
Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)

Everything Radio Book: 40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio
40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio

Everything Radio Book: World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting
World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting

Everything Radio Book: Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications
Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications

Everything Radio Book: Radio: An Illustrated Guide
Radio: An Illustrated Guide

Everything Radio Book: Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...
Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...

Everything Radio Book: Trans-Sister Radio
Trans-Sister Radio

Everything Radio Book: The Voice on the Radio
The Voice on the Radio

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Guides: Radio - Articles - Radio direction finder - Wikipedia

Radio direction finder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A radio direction finder, or RDF, is a device for finding the direction to a radio source. Due to radio's ability to travel very long distances "over the horizon", it makes a particularly good navigation system for ships and aircraft that might be flying at long distances from land.

RDF's work by pointing a directional antenna in "various directions" and then listening for the direction in which the signal from a known station came through most strongly. This sort of system was widely used in the 1930s and 1940s. RDF antennas are particularly easy to spot on German World War II aircraft, as loops under the rear section of the fuselage, whereas most US aircraft enclosed the antenna in a small teardrop-shaped fairing.

In more recent times the task of finding the signal has been automated in the automatic direction finder, or ADF. In this system the antenna consists of a small cylinder of wire, a solenoid that is highly directional, which is spun by a motor. The electronics listen either for the repeated "peak" in the signal, or just as commonly, the "trough" when the signal drops to zero when the antenna is at right angles to the signal. A small lamp attached to a disk is timed to spin at the same speed as the antenna, so when the peak or trough is detected the lamp flashes briefly. To the human eye it appears to be a single spot of light on top of a compass rose.

Signals are provided in the form of radio beacons, the radio version of a lighthouse. The signal is typically a simple AM broadcast of a morse code series of letters, which the RDF can tune in to see if the beacon is "on the air". Most modern detectors can also tune in any commercial radio stations, which is particularly useful due to their high power and location near major cities.

RDF was once the primary form of aircraft navigation, and strings of beacons were used to form "airways" from airport to airport. In the 1950s these systems were generally being replaced by the VOR system, in which the angle to the beacon can be measured from the signal itself, with no moving parts. Since the signal being broadcast in the RDF system is non-directional, these older beacons were referred to as non-directional beacons, or NDB in the aviation world.

Today all such systems are being generally removed in favour of the much more accurate and user-friendly GPS system. However the low cost of ADF systems today has meant something of a comeback, whereas the expensive VOR systems will likely all be switched off before 2010.

See also:

radio navigation
VOR

Everything Radio Book: Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)
Now You're Talking!: All You Need to Get Your First Ham Radio License (Now Youre Talking, 5th Ed)
  Everything Radio Book: Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)
Passport to World Band Radio: 2004 (Passport to World Band Radio, 2004)
  Everything Radio Book: 40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio
40 Watts from Nowhere : A Journey into Pirate Radio
  Everything Radio Book: World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting
World Radio TV Handbook 2004: The Directory of Global Broadcasting
 
Everything Radio Book: Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications
Say Again, Please: Guide to Radio Communications
  Everything Radio Book: Radio: An Illustrated Guide
Radio: An Illustrated Guide
  Everything Radio Book: Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...
Darwin's Radio : In the next stage of evolution, humans are history...
  Everything Radio Book: Trans-Sister Radio
Trans-Sister Radio
 
Everything Radio Book: The Voice on the Radio
The Voice on the Radio
   
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_direction_finder
◄◄ Jump  More→ 1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|10|11|12|13|14|Radio Links|More Guides Everything Radio Radio Directory

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