Broadband Radar Debuts in MiamiA new-generation navigation tool gets its official rollout and wins the mega-splash award at winter’s biggest boat show. An electronic review from our May 2009 issue
Apr 28, 2009 By Ben Ellison (More articles by this author)
Instead of using a magnetron to fire out short 2-kilowatt or 4-kilowatt pulses, as a conventional dome scanner does, Broadband Radar uses transistors to transmit a continuous, though frequency-modulated, signal at a mere 0.1 watt! That adds up to a 30-percent power savings when in use, and more battery savings are possible since Broadband Radar can go from Off to low-draw Standby mode in seconds and from Standby to On instantly. Moreover, since silicone chips are not only faster but more stable than old-school vacuum tubes, Broadband Radar's automated tuning algorithms are purportedly more reliable, as is the whole scanner. And finally, the extreme low wattage leads to the emission of considerably less dangerous radiation and a "human safe distance" of zero feet, as certified by the Federal Communications Commission, which means that Broadband Radar broadens a sailor's installation choices.
But can you see anything with a 0.1-watt radar? After several hours of scoping target-rich Biscayne Bay, my impression was a qualified "Wow!" Timing target returns on frequency changes instead of pulses means that Broadband Radar claims an unheard-of range resolution of about 10 feet at range settings under a few miles, and it doesn't lose really close targets in noise. In other words, targets don't vanish into the blotch seen around your own vessel on conventional radars or into the blankness created by most newer "high-definition" radars, even at never-seen-before 200- and 300-foot ranges. The result was extraordinarily clean detail for an 18-inch radome; it would, for instance, tightly resolve all the vessels in an anchorage, even moving tenders, which would be a godsend when negotiating, say, my home port of Camden, Maine, in fog or darkness. I was further impressed with how easy Broadband Radar was to use on both an NX45 from Simrad (www.simradyachting.com) and a new HDS10 from Lowrance (www.lowrance.com). Incidentally, the latter's handsome built-in charts, low-powered LED screen, and excellent support for NMEA 2000 data and Sirius Weather/Audio suggest that sailors should start paying attention to Lowrance in the way that fishermen do. What we didn't get to see on Biscayne Bay was the radar's long-range target plotting—purportedly OK, but not great, to 24 miles—or its performance in rough seas and/or rain—both supposedly excellent. I also didn't assess its ability to reject interference from other radars, although Navico said it was close to a solution for this problem. These are all good reasons for me to test Broadband Radar aboard my own boat this summer and report on it in an upcoming CW. Navico's scanners, priced from $1,700 to $2,100, depending on such extra features as automatic target tracking, are definitely unique and interesting.
Other Gear You'll Want to See Also demo cruising around Miami was Raymarine (www.raymarine.com), with no fewer than three inventive new products. Yes, the new $1,750 ST70 Plus is like the original ST70 instrument display in terms of a graphically playful yet powerful interface able to put all sorts of instrument and system data onto multiple, highly customizable screen pages, even using third-party NMEA 2000 data. But it improves big time on all that, and it separates its ultrabright 6.5-inch, high-res LED screen from a $545 keypad, which can be mounted, say, at the helm and can control many mast- or bulkhead-mounted Plus displays at once or one at a time. ST70 Plus displays can also be set up with an alternate $600 keypad to serve as matching and integrated autopilot heads.
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