> I've been saving one of those wine-box bladders of aluminized(?) mylar to > put on a paddle blade as a radar reflector. Would that work? e > Elaine Harmon - eilidh_at_dc.seflin.org - eharmon_at_cs.miami.edu Radar reflectors are made of several surfaces perpendicular to each other. The effect of this arrangement is that radar waves are reflected back in the same direction in which they came. You can try this effect on a pool table--throw a ball to a corner so that it bounces on two walls, and see how the ball comes back in a direction paralell to the initial throw. An aluminized paddle blade would only be visible to radar if it happened to be a the right angle when the radar antenna points at it; this is very unlikely. Now some food for thought. Why do kayakers need to be visible to radar? A ship that navigates by radar is probably to big and restricted to do anything about that little dot in the screen that is not supposed to be there. Would it not be better for us kayakers to have radar and become aware of big ships in fog long before they pass over us? my two cents, - Julio *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List Submissions: paddlewise_at_lists.intelenet.net Subscriptions: paddlewise-request_at_lists.intelenet.net Website: http://www.paddlewise.net/ ***************************************************************************Received on Tue Oct 05 1999 - 11:25:59 PDT
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