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Gimballed
Radar Bracket for the Backstay |
Swinging bracket for radom antennas at the back
stay
The semi - gimballed suspension of the radom antenna at the backstay
equals the tilted position of a yacht for an optimized radar image, even
when you are sailing close hauled.
At a vertical radar beam of e.g. 30 ° (+
- 15 °) , from a tilting degree of 15° on a lateral radar picture
is not possible without a swinging compensation.
The antenna will stick sideways into the water
or into the air.
This will produce a dead angle, other ships
can not be seen.
Screw the bracket through the deck and fix it to the back stay. This
stay can still be used as an antenna, because the clamp consists of isolated
material.
Simply put the radar antenna on the swinging arm and lead the cable
safety through the pipe. The top bracket can be adjusted to various
backstay angles, so the radom antenna can be adjusted horizontally in forward
d irection.
An oil dampened bearing prevents from swinging in rough seas. |
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Technical data
Lenght: 2,70 m, can be seperated for transport.
Swing area Radom: 90 degrees to both sides.
Oil dampened bearing
Material: V4A, anodised aluminum bearing
Adjustable backstay angle: 55 - 75 degrees
Backstay bracket: isolated, for stays of 6 - 14 mm in diameter
Deck bracket for M8 screws
Made in Germany
For the Radom there should be about 70 - 90 cm of space between
the backstay and the mainsail. So the mainsail will not touch the Radom.
Minimum distance from backstay to mainsail in 2,5 m (height):
- Furuno 1623: 70 cm
- Furuno 1712: 72 cm
- Raymarine 2 kW Radom: 77 cm
- Raymarine 4 kW Radom 90 cm
Type 1 is suitable for:
- Furuno 1621, 1622, 1623,
1712
- JRC 1500 MKII
Type 2 is suitable for:
- Raymarine 2kW Radom (SL72, RL72, RL82, C-Series,
E
Series)
Included in delivery:
Deck bracket wit counter bracket, standing pipe, Top bracket with bearing,
Radar swing bracket
| Radar bracket Backstay Type 1 |
1995,00 €
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| Radar bracket Backstay Type 2 |
1995,00 €
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