August 20,2008:
The US Army has successfully tested
its new EQ-36 artillery and mortar finding radar. Easier to use and repair, as
well as more reliable than its predecessor, the AN TPQ-36/37, the army wants to
buy at least 180 EQ-36s, for about $9 million each. The EQ-36 will also be able
to scan all around (360 degrees), rather than just 90 degrees (as with the
current system,) and be faster as well.
The older
FireFinder (AN TPQ-36/37) radar has gotten a bad reputation over the last few
years. That was often for failing to detect incoming mortar fire. FireFinder was
developed in the 1970s, based on Vietnam experience with enemy mortar and
rocket attacks.
FireFinder is a radar system which, when it
spots an incoming shell, calculates where it came from and transmits the
location to a nearby artillery unit, which then fires on where the mortar is
(or was). This process takes 3-4 minutes (or less, for experienced troops.)
FireFinder worked as advertised, but got little use until U.S. troops entered
Iraq. Since then, the FireFinder has been very effective, and heavily used. Too
heavily used. There were not a lot of spare parts stockpiled for FireFinder,
and several hundred million dollars worth had to be quickly ordered. The
manufacturer has also introduced new components, that are more reliable, and
easier to maintain.
Meanwhile,
existing FireFinders are often failing to catch incoming fire, either because
of equipment failure, or because the enemy is using tactics that fool the
radar. For example, in Iraq, American bases are generally on higher ground than
the mortars firing at them. Putting bases on the high ground enables you to
watch more of the surrounding. But FireFinder needs a line-of-sight to get a
good fix on the firing weapons position. If the mortar is too far below the
radar, FireFinder cannot accurately spot where the fire is coming from.
Another
problem is that if the mortar is too close, FireFinder is much less likely to
quickly determine where the fire is coming from. So the enemy mortar teams get
as close as they can before firing. This still makes the mortar teams
vulnerable to counterattack by coalition troops, but not the immediate (in a
few minutes) artillery fire that FireFinder can make happen under the right
conditions.
At first,
the army was going to halt further upgrades on FireFinder, which, after all was
developed thirty years ago, and begin developing the EQ-36, a new system that
can better deal with the kinds of problems encountered in Iraq. But FireFinder
has been so useful, that new upgrades were pursued anyway, while work continued
on the EQ-36. The upgrades have also been made available to other users of
FireFinder (including, just in the Middle East, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Saudi
Arabia and Turkey.)