- Source: Targeting pod
Targeting pods (TGP) are target designation tools used by attack aircraft for identifying targets and guiding precision-guided munition (PGM) such as laser-guided bombs to those targets. The first targeting pods were developed in conjunction with the earliest generation of PGMs in the mid-1960s.
Categories
= Laser designators
=The design of laser-guided bombs requires a "laser spot tracker" that locates reflected pulsed laser light from a designated target. This enables an aircraft's targeting system to home in on that specific target. The simplest spot trackers, such as the Pave Penny pod, have no laser at all, just a laser sensor.
Some targeting systems incorporate a laser rangefinder, a laser beam that can calculate the precise range to a target and communicate that information to the nav/attack system. Many targeting pods or installations use the same sensor as the laser spot tracker to receive the reflected rangefinder signal, so they can perform both ranging and tracking. These are called laser ranger and marked target seeker (LRMTS).
Some targeting systems have a laser that can designate a target for laser-guided munitions, enabling the aircraft to designate its own targets or designate for other friendly units. LRMTS installations (particularly fixed internal units) of the 1970s often did not have a laser of sufficient power and slant range to designate targets, although they could provide rangefinding. Such units required targets to be designated by a ground designator or forward air controller in another aircraft.
= Electro-optics
=The basic electro-optical (EO) sensor is essentially a video camera, usually with a magnification lens, helping the aircrew to locate and identify targets. For night and adverse weather use, many EO sensors incorporate low-light light-amplification systems. Some pods supplement the basic visual EO with forward-looking infrared (FLIR) to aid in locating and identifying targets in darkness. Such systems are sometimes called infrared search and track sensors.
= Radar
=Some pods may contain a small radar set for targeting and navigation, particularly for aircraft that have no search radar. Such a system, for example, was developed for the unsuccessful N/AW (Night/Adverse Weather) version of the USAF A-10 Thunderbolt II. Currently, laser and infrared systems are more common than radar because they are less easily detected by adversaries, providing less warning to the target. Lasers can also provide more accurate ranging data for aerial gunnery.
List of targeting pods
= Laser spot tracker pods
=AN/AVQ-11 Pave Sword
AN/AVQ-14 Pave Arrow
AN/AAS-35(V) Pave Penny
= Laser designator pods
=ATLIS
ATLIS II
K/PZS-01
Loong Eye I
Loong Eye II
OC2
OC5
AN/AVQ-10 Pave Knife
AN/AVQ-16 Pave Tack
AN/AVQ-23 Pave Spike
AN/ASQ-153 Pave Spike
= FLIR pods
=Blue Sky navigation pod
= FLIR and laser designator pods
=AN/ASQ-173
AN/ASQ-228 ATFLIR
ASELPOD
AUEODS
FILAT
K/JDC-01
AN/AAQ-14 LANTIRN
AN/AAQ-28(V) LITENING
AN/AAS-38 Nite Hawk
AN/AAQ-33 Sniper XR
AN/AVQ-26 Pave Tack
PDLCT
STS-55
STS-56
Thales Damoclès
Thales TALIOS
TIALD
TX-S55
TX-S56
WMD-7
UOMZ Sapsan-E
T220/E
YINGS-III
T220
= Radar homing pods
=AN/ASQ-213
See also
Guidance system
Laser sight (firearms)
List of laser articles
List of military electronics of the United States
AN/PEQ-1 SOFLAM
References
External links
Media related to Targeting pods at Wikimedia Commons
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pod penarget
- HARM Targeting System
- LANTIRN
- AN/ASQ-228 ATFLIR
- Thales Damocles
- ProtectIR
- LITENING
- Lockheed Martin Sniper XR
- M981 FISTV
- CAC/PAC JF-17 Thunder
- Targeting pod
- Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod
- Damocles (targeting pod)
- AN/AAQ-28 Litening
- LANTIRN
- Pod
- Targeting
- List of equipment of the Pakistan Air Force
- LT PGB
- AN/ASQ-213 HARM targeting system