silverslk
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Garbage Grove, CA
IslanderOffRoad said:The fact is the front plate gives them a good reflective surface for radar to bounce off of when they're checking your speed.
I think I'll spray the damn thing flat black then put it back on.
Radar doesn't need a reflective surface. It only needs a surface perpendicular to its travel. Thats why the stealth fighters and bombers use angles. Its not like a chrome bumper is more appealing to radar than a flat black one.
Short radio waves reflect from curves and corners, in a way similar to glint from a rounded piece of glass. The most reflective targets for short wavelengths have 90° angles between the reflective surfaces. A structure consisting of three flat surfaces meeting at a single corner, like the corner on a box, will always reflect waves entering its opening directly back at the source. These so-called corner reflectors are commonly used as radar reflectors to make otherwise difficult-to-detect objects easier to detect, and are often found on boats in order to improve their detection in a rescue situation and to reduce collisions. For similar reasons, objects attempting to avoid detection will angle their surfaces in a way to eliminate inside corners and avoid surfaces and edges perpendicular to likely detection directions, which leads to "odd" looking stealth aircraft. These precautions do not completely eliminate reflection because of diffraction, especially at longer wavelengths. Half wavelength long wires or strips of conducting material, such as chaff, are very reflective but do not direct the scattered energy back toward the source. The extent to which an object reflects or scatters radio waves is called its radar cross section.