PART 2
GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES
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PART 2
GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES
INTRODUCTION | 2-2 |
Need for IFF and history relating to its development | 2-2 |
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PRESENT UNIVERSAL SYSTEM-MARK III IFF | 2-3 |
Equipment and operational characteristics | 2-3 |
Coded response | 2-5 |
One cycle analysis of IFF operation | 2-6 |
Reporting distress with IFF | 2-8 |
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SECURITY | 2-12 |
Necessity of safeguarding IFF security | 2-12 |
The destructor-the safeguard against enemy possession | 2-12 |
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ADDITIONAL USES OF IFF | 2-13 |
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EQUIPMENT FAILURES | 2-14 |
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LIMITATIONS OF MARK III IFF | 2-14 |
Non-directional interrogation and range identification | 2-14 |
Wide beam of BL and faulty identification | 2-15 |
360 degree IFF due to minor lobes | 2-16 |
Red and green band triggering | 2-16 |
IFF interference and code readability | 2-17 |
IFF signals too narrow on long range | 2-17 |
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SUMMARY | 2-17 |
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2-1
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
INTRODUCTION
In this section we are concerned with a major problem: that of
identification. Having detected a
target and interpreted it to be a plane or a ship, how can you he certain
whether the target is
friendly or enemy?
Consider for a moment how ineffective a sentry patrolling an outpost in a
war zone would he if
he were unable to distinguish between the men attached to his unit and
the enemy trespassers.
There would he two courses of action open to him: he could either sound a
general alarm for each
person who approached his post, or he could allow everyone to pass
unchallenged into the camp,
assuming that they could he identified later. Such practice would
inevitably lead to disaster.
However, we are confronted with much the same problem in radar operation.
Radar is a long-range sentry that reports the presence of all trespassers, and is
constantly on the alert for
enemy ships, planes, and other objects.
Of course, the customary Navy methods of identification are still
available. But in challenging
by blinker light and by high frequency radio voice codes, the sender must
disclose his position
to the challenged contact. Both methods have the added disadvantage of
range limitations.
In the accounts of the earliest tactical use of radar, all the evidence
points to a lack of suitable
means of target identification as the most serious limitation of radio
detection and ranging.
Need for IFF and history relating to its development.
We are indebted to the British for development of the equipment that we so
sorely needed. They had
their own system of radar and its use helped in no small measure to save
England in her gravest
hour of peril. Still, at the outset, one serious limitation threatened to
destroy radar's
effectiveness, and that was this same problem of identification-the
problem of IFF,
Identification, Friend or Foe.
While the Luftwaffe was striking and the RAF was strictly on the
defensive, the British radar
operator had no identification problem, for his own
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fighter rarely ventured far from home. Thus, it could be taken for
granted that all planes
approaching from across the Channel or flying in from the North Sea were
enemy. However, the
Germans soon abandoned their daylight assaults because they could not
stand the appalling losses
of men and aircraft. This was the first real setback that the Luftwaffe
had encountered in its
wholesale bombings.
Driven from the sunlit skies, the Nazis resorted to all-out night
bombings, relying on darkness
to shroud the destruction-laden bombers from the deadly sting of the
Spitfires and Hurricanes.
But this freedom from effective fighter opposition did not last long.
Radar, constructed so
compactly that it could be taken aloft in night fighter planes,
unerringly sought out the almost
invisible black bombers. When the keen-eyed pilots had jockeyed their
planes into gun range,
the Nazis were met with a rain of hot steel pouring at them out of the
darkness. As the night
fighters were sent up in greater numbers, the toll of enemy planes
increased, but so did the
problem of target identification. Before he opened fire, the RAF pilot
had to be certain that the
pip was from an enemy plane and not from a comrade's plane (and the pips
looked the same on
his scope). The old problem of identification grew steadily more
troublesome and the need for a
solution became more critical.
It was the RAF's switch from the defensive to the offensive that really
brought the need for an
infallible system of identification to the forefront. Realizing that
merely guarding their tight
island fortress was not enough, the RAF had launched its own offensive.
Soon British raiders
were making the trip back and forth across the Channel.
The Nazis, foiled and confused by the magic of radar, started dispatching
their bombers close on
the tails of the returning British squadrons. Unaware that German planes
were trailing them,
or, in some cases even flying among their formations, the British pilots
led the Nazis safely
through the defensive radar network unrecognized. The radar operators
were unable to
distinguish between a pip from the British planes which they were
expecting and one from a
Nazi, for there was no observable difference in the appearance of either
pip. The first indication
of the electronic sentry's failure to detect the enemy was the
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
crash of bombs on factories, hangars, and other objectives. The British
defenses were taken
completely by surprise. The raiders withdrew before the anti-aircraft guns
could get into
operation and before a fighter could get off the ground. The radar
operators were powerless to
stop the leak so long as the British carried on their own cross-channel
operations.
Faced with realization that the radio locator was totally ineffective in
coping with the new
tactics, the English radio technicians working feverishly developed and
put into production in
one short week a type of identification radar, the first IFF unit. This
special unit produced an
identifying pulse that appeared on the screen along with the target pip.
With this new equipment
installed in the RAF planes and working in conjunction with land-based
and shipborne radar,
the operator was at last able to identify the target as friendly by
observing whether the
additional signal accompanied the target pip. Since the enemy aircraft
were not equipped with
the special unit, they could immediately be identified as hostile simply
by the lack of the
distinctive identification pulse. The addition of IFF made radar a
relatively trustworthy long-range sentry that could distinguish between friend and foe.
PRESENT UNIVERSAL SYSTEM-MARK III IFF RADAR
The addition to the radar family, IFF, is designated as the "B" group,
with different models
indicated by a second letter; however, an "A" precedes the two letters on
the name plates of
airborne equipment. The modifications and improvements on the original
system, the ABA (also
referred to by the "Mark" designation) or Mark I, have been numerous, but
the basic principles
of operation are similar. In this discussion attention is centered upon
the Mark III, the IFF
system in use today.
Equipment and operational characteristics.
Mark III IFF consists of two distinct units. The BL or BN is the set we
will consider first. It is
really just a "baby radar" with some of the regular radar units missing.
It has an antenna, a
duplexer, a transmitter, and a receiver, but no modulation generator or
indicating device, using
instead the radar set's timing system and indicator. The BL is a
shipborne or land-based
recognition radar placed alongside the search radar. It is the function
of this unit to "challenge"
the detected target and identify it as either friendly or hostile. Only
friendly craft answer the
challenge (providing they are equipped with the necessary
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transponding unit). In the cabinet housing the BL are two separate sections;
the interrogator and
the responsor. The section that challenges the unknown craft is called
the interrogator. As its
name implies, it interrogates or questions the units carried by friendly
aircraft and surface
vessels. The responsor section of the BL intercepts the answers to the
challenge.
The interrogator is a low-power transmitter that creates a short-duration
pulse of radio
energy which is beamed out as a pulse of radio waves. This pulse from the
BL or BN is the
questioning signal or challenge directed at the detected craft, and
although it is slightly wider
(i.e., it lasts a few millionths of a second longer) than the radar
transmitter pulse, its strength
or power is weak in comparison. From your study of basic radar you will
recall that it was
necessary to send out a very high-power pulse in order to get even a
small reflection off the
target in return. The "echo principle" is not used by the BL. A different
principle is involved.
All that is required from the interrogator is enough power to send the
questioning radio waves to
any craft within the range of the search radar. Of course, the signal
must be strong enough when
it reaches the target for it to be picked up by a special "receiver"
carried solely by friendly air
or surface craft.
The BL transmitter transmits on a narrow band of frequencies, the upper
end of which overlaps
the band employed by air-search radar transmitters. Different bands are
necessary to prevent
the air-search operation from interfering with the identification.
Without this separation a
maddening jumble would result, similar to that heard on any radio when
more than one station
is picked up at the same spot on the dial. That situation is undesirable
in radar when one station
is the interrogator and the other the search transmitter. The pulse rate
of the BL is generally
the same as the pulse rate of the radar transmitter, and the two units
start to pulse
synchronously, since the "keyer" of the search radar that triggers its
own transmitter also
triggers the BL transmitter.
Invariably the BL is connected to the available model of shipborne radar
designed for air search.
There are several reasons for the BL being used in conjunction with
air-search gear: first, air-search radar can detect both air and surface targets; second, the range
of search for this type of
radar is longer; and third, the size and construction of the antenna
pedestal and framework wake
it possible to fasten the directional BL antenna system to the air-search
antenna structure (SA,
SC-1, SC-2, SC-3, and SK all incorporate the directional BL antenna). The
BL
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
antenna sends out its spurt of radio waves in a wide but somewhat
directional beam to the object
on which the search beam is trained. Thus the questioning signals are
sent out to the craft that
has been detected at the bearing toward which the antenna is pointing.
The BL radiating section
serves to emit the challenging pulse as well as to intercept the answer
from the unit aboard the
challenged craft which indicates it is friendly. But it is not practical
to mount the directional BL
antenna array on the barrel stave or spinner antennas connected with
surface-search radars.
Either a "stove pipe" or a "steering wheel" antenna is used with these
latter types, which are non-directional because they are merely single dipoles. The three types
are shown in figure 2-1 below.

Figure 2-1. IFF antennas.
The BN is identical to the BL insofar as component parts and operational
characteristics are
concerned. The main differences between them are in size and power
output. The BL is the
larger, more powerful unit used with air-search radar on the larger
ships; the BN answers the
need for a compact, lower power unit that will operate on both large and
small craft in
conjunction with the surface-search radars, The BN is generally connected
to the non-directional type of antenna.
The second section of the BL, the responsor, functions as the receiving
or "listening"
apparatus; it receives the answer to the challenge. The responsor is a
powerful receiving set
which is always tuned to the same frequency as the interrogator. By the
action of the duplexer,
the antenna is switched from the BL transmitter, at the end of the pulse,
to the BL receiver,
allowing each to work in its turn without interference from the other.
The weak reply signal is
amplified or strengthened by the receiver into a sizable signal. With the
"remote" IFF
(receiver) gain control (located on the control panel of the search-radar
set) the operator can
adjust the amount
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of amplification or gain to the required level. After the signal is
amplified, it is changed or
converted into a positive voltage (or negative output which is required
by some search radars)
available for application to an indicator unit. Since the BL has no
indicator unit of its own, the
indicator of the search radar must picture the IFF output. In order to
make the identification
signal visible, the receiver delivers the impulse to the A scope of the
search indicator. The
positive signal voltage is applied to the lower vertical deflection plate
of the C.R.T. Attracted
downward by the momentary positive signal, the electron beam is pulled
down, tracing a pulse
below the time base line. This is an important point to remember: the
identifying signal appears
below the trace line, and by appearing there, lessens the possibility of
confusing IFF
indications with target pips which invariably appear above the trace line.
The unit of the IFF communication system that receives the challenge and
sends back the
identifying pulse or "answer" is termed the transpondor. The transpondor
is most commonly
referred to by its abbreviated designations: the BK, or shipborne model,
and the ABK, or
airborne model. (The BK and the ABK are practically identical in all
respects.)
Since the transpondor was originally designed for aircraft use only, the
ABK-BK is small,
compact equipment weighing about 30 pounds. Housed in the cabinet are two
sections comprising
the receiver and the transmitter. In its operation, the transpondor is
entirely automatic once it
has been turned on. Although it can tell a ship or ground station that
the plane carrying it is
friendly, it can not furnish the pilot of the plane carrying it the same
information about the
ships below him. Only the ship or land station finds out that it is a
friendly airplane. The BK in
your ship hookup is not associated in any way with your own radar
equipment. The plane
equipped with ABK may not have any other radar at all, but if it should
have, it has no
connection whatsoever with its IFF unit. The ABK, located in the plane,
is connected to a small
non-directional antenna which intercepts the questioning signals from any
direction. An antenna
with this characteristic of picking up signals sent out from any
direction is very desirable, for
the safety of the craft depends upon its ability to receive the
challenges from all points of the
compass and send back the answers which appear as the identifying pips on
the scope of the
search-radar indicator.
The steering wheel dipole antenna is generally used with BK in shipboard
installations, and a
single dipole is utilized for aircraft (ABK) installations.
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2-4
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
The ABK receiver tunes the same wave band on which the BL transmits. If the
ABK were tuned to
the low end of the band, would it receive the challenge from the BL
interrogator transmitting on
the high end of the same band? Obviously it would not, and on account of
its inability to receive
the question, there would be no answer forthcoming. To make your identity
known to all
interrogators, you must he able to "hear" each of them separately. If only
one fixed frequency
were used by all BL and all ABK equipment, the receiving of challenges
would be like listening to
a crowd of people all talking at once. In such a case, many of the
questioners would be either
indistinguishable or blocked out entirely. To avoid this, BL equipment is
tuned at different
points on the frequency band. But how can the ABK receiver pick up those
different signals if it
is tuned to a fixed frequency? Only the challenges from interrogators
transmitting at the same
frequency would be intercepted.
In the past when you tuned in your radio, you twirled the dial of your
receiver from one end of
the broadcast band to the other, catching brief snatches of programs until
you found the one you
wanted. The tuning action of the transpondor is quite similar. The tuning
mechanism itself is
automatically operated by a motor-driven cam, so that the band of
frequencies is being
continually swept. Each time the tuner reaches the high end of the
frequency sweep, the device
flies back to the low end and repeats the operation at a slow, constant
rate. Approximately two
and a half seconds are required to tune from the low frequency to the high
frequency end of the
band. Another half second elapses while the tuning device flies back to the
starting point at the
lower end of the hand. This means that one tuning sweep requires a total
time of three seconds.
Therefore, the receiver is tuned for a short time to each interrogator
frequency along the band
every three seconds. The ABK receives a challenge at the instant its
frequency matches the
interrogator frequency, and this match takes place at regular three second
intervals (as long as
the search-radar antenna remains trained at the target with the BL on).
Whenever the ABK tunes in a EL challenge, it automatically amplifies and
converts the signal
into a strong voltage, which is applied as a "kick" to the transmitter
section of the transpondor.
The transmitter is normally at "standby," -not functioning- while the receiver
is on constantly.
As soon as the positive signal voltage is fed from the receiver, it
immediately triggers or turns
on the transmitter and the receiver is turned off or blocked, This ABK
transmitter functions
like any other transmitter. It creates
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a pulse; actually it generates the reply or response to the challenge. The
generated pulse is
radiated in all directions from the non-directional antenna. This pulse is
a low-power
transmission, but it is much more powerful than the echo signals of
ranging. The pulse rate of
the ABK will he the same as the rate at which the BL sends challenges to
the ABK. At the
completion of each reply pulse, the transmitter rests, and after a recovery
period the receiver
comes on again to receive another questioning signal; upon receiving the
signal, the triggering
is repeated. If the receiver picks up no challenges, the transmitter will
remain at rest because
of the lack of the triggering voltage.
A common tuning section serves to tune the receiver and the transmitter
across the wave band.
Whenever the receiver is tuned to the frequency of an interrogator, the
transmitter (tuned to
the same frequency) responds at the same frequency as the challenger's.
Coded response.
Finding that a single IFF response might be imitated by the enemy, the
designers of the
transpondor found a way to make the answers more complicated. With three
circuits available
for connection to the ABK transmitter, and with the characteristics of each
such that the pulse
width can be changed, means are provided for coding the replies. When the
ABK transmitter is
honked up by the cam system to one circuit, the pulse width is seven
microseconds, the narrow
or short pulse; connection to another circuit produces a 21 microseconds,
or wide pulse; the
third blocks the transmitter from answering, resulting in the "blank"
response or "silent"
period. Each time the tuning sweep begins, the cam connects the transmitter
to one of the
circuits. If the narrow pulse circuit is first hooked in, any challenge
received in the three-second period will be answered by a narrow pulse. At the completion of the
sweep of the band,
the narrow pulse circuit is disconnected by the cam action and the wide
pulse circuit is
connected to the transmitter; all responses in this three-second period are
wide pulses. During
the next three-second interval, if the blank circuit is cut in, there will
be no responses, for
this is the silent or "skip" period.
The three different responses are made into combinations or codes, a code
consisting of any four
signals, pulses, and/or blanks. Twelve seconds are required to send or
complete the code of four
characters which are made up into some of the following combinations:
narrow, narrow, wide,
blank; or narrow, narrow, wide, wide. When the blank is part of the
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
code, an additional three seconds exists between two pulses,-the skip
period. The timing in the
first example above would be first, a narrow pulse; three seconds later,
a narrow pulse; three
seconds later, a wide pulse; six seconds later, a narrow pulse, etc. The
code is repeated every
12 seconds, and will continue so long as the antenna points at the target
when the IFF switch is
on. With six separate codes available, the particular code to be used can
be selected by means of
a six-position switch on the control box. (The six codes used are highly
confidential and will not
be described in this book.)
A special response feature is provided on the ABK, -a fourth circuit
separate from the coding
set of three, that gives an 80-microsecond, very wide pulse. This reply
is controlled by a
separate switch, the emergency switch which is protected by a guard that
must be lifted before
the switch can be snapped on. When the switch is thrown to the emergency
position, the 80-microsecond pulse, regardless of the position of the code switch, is sent out to all challengers at
three-second intervals, and is the signal of distress.
One cycle analysis of IFF operation.
Given an understanding of the makeup of the Mark III IFF system and the
function of each unit,
let us trace, the operation of the equipment through one complete cycle.
Assume that the operator has detected a target bearing 080 degrees, range 60
miles, and has identified
it as a plane. His next step is to determine whether it is enemy or
friendly. Keeping the antenna
trained on the target, he turns on the IFF switch to put the BL
interrogator into operation. He is
now in the position of a sentry challenging a trespasser. (Normally the
IFF switch is off and the
BL is in standby, i.e.: the transmitter is resting and the receiver is
effectively disconnected
from the ship's radar indicator). The BL pulse and the pulse of the
search gear travel out to the
target at the same speed. Both beams strike the plane surfaces and reach
the antenna of the
transpondor. Part of the waves from the search radar are reflected, and a
small part of the
challenge pulse is bounced back, but it so trivial that it dies out
almost immediately.
Of the two wave fronts striking the ABK antenna, only those from the BL
can he tuned in by the
ABK receiver; the ship's radar transmission is above the frequency range
of the ABK. (This is
presuming that the ABK has tuned to the BL frequency at this instant).
The echo from the search
pulse has begun its return trip before the ABK receiver succeeds in
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triggering the transmitter. This delay may consume from three to five
microseconds.
(For this example let us assume that the pilot of the detected plane has
set his ABK to the code
position that would give the response: narrow, narrow, wide, wide). The
echo returns to the
search antenna where it is intercepted and fed to the receiver tuned to
pick it up, the search
receiver. The echo signal finally appears as a pip showing above the
trace line. At the instant the
target pip is completed, the narrow response is intercepted by the BL
antenna (the search
receiver will reject this signal just as the BL receiver had previously
rejected the echo signal
due to differences in frequency). The signal, delivered to the responsor,
is amplified and then
converted to a positive voltage, whereupon it is supplied to the
indicator unit of the ship's
radar. The trace is pulled downward, forming below the trace line a
narrow pulse that is just to
the right of the target pip (owing to the longer time required for the
two-way IFF
communication). The IFF indication is much stronger than the pip from the
plane because it is
the result of a stronger signal. The downward indication is connected to
the pip it identifies,
making it possible to associate the proper target with its identifying
signal.
The action just described is repeated each time the search transmitter
pulses, so long as the
ABK is tuned to the BL output. The narrow IFF signal is easily
distinguished from the wide, as it
appears to be just slightly wider than the target pip of one plane, and
when measured along the
time base its total width covers approximately one mile of range. After
appearing on the screen
for about a tenth of a second, the narrow pulse disappears (the ABK has
tuned past the BL
frequency so it is no longer triggered by your interrogator unit), and
not until three seconds
later does the IFF signal again flash on the screen. Since the narrow
signal is next in the code
series, a narrow pulse flashes briefly on the scope, three seconds after
the first, and soon
disappears, leaving only the target indication.
Three seconds later the wide pulse appears on the indicator. After
another three-second wait a
wide pulse again flashes downward; it appears for a fraction of a second
and then it, too,
disappears. Three seconds afterward, a narrow signal flashes, to begin
anew the coding sequence.
Thus the code is repeated time after time (so long as you continue to
interrogate) with each code
requiring a space of 12 seconds. As the wide IFF signal is the result of
the 21-microsecond
pulse, it is about four times as broad
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
as the target pip of one plane and is roughly two
times the width of the narrow IFF pip. In other words, the wide
indication measures almost two
miles in width along the trace line. (All measurements are made from the
leading edge of the signal
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to its outer edge, and it is a good idea to make an estimation to
determine these values because
the pulse is on the screen for such a short time). A person experienced
in operating radar and observing the IFF codes can identify the code appearing on
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Figure 2-2. Block diagram of a typical radar system with IFF.
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
the indicator in at least 24 seconds; the time of two coding periods.
Both the Germans and the Japanese have had some luck in building an
airborne machine that
triggers off from the challenges of our interrogators. The first models
gave only the one-size
signal in answer. With our ARK-equipped aircraft giving any one of
a possible six codes, the operator may encounter little trouble in
detecting which was the false
response of the hostile planes. By establishing specific periods of
operation for each of the six
codes, the system of frequently changing the password minimizes even
further the possibility
of the foe hitting upon a signal that might he confused with the friendly
combination. For
instance, from 2400 to 0600 all surface craft and aircraft in a specified
area will set the BK
and ABK code switch to Code No. 3, and all operators of search radars are
instructed to report all
but the No. 3 response as unfriendly during the same period. Then, during
the hours 0600 to
1200 Code No. 6 will be the selected password; thus, throughout the day,
the acceptable answer
is varied. (The radar officer keeps the men informed of the code to be
accepted for any
corresponding hour). The system of changing codes throughout the day or
week is similar to
changing passwords regularly to reduce the possibility that an enemy will
discover the
password and get by a sentry.
As soon as a target is identified as friendly, the IFF switch is turned
off and the identifying
signals cease, for the ABK is no longer being triggered. To continue to
challenge a plane or ship
is undesirable after it has been identified, especially near hostile
areas, for the IFF signals
travel over long distances and continuous questioning of one plane might
enable the enemy to
pick up the signals in the powerful receivers that are constantly combing
the air for our
transmissions. The B!. should he kept in a standby condition, ready to
challenge when the IFF
switch is turned on.
The following are, in brief, the main characteristics which aid in
recognizing an IFF signal on
the A scope:
1. It appears below the time base.
2. It is a stronger or longer indication than the target blip.
3. It is a broader signal than a one-plane target pip.
4. It is to the right of the target it identifies.
5. It appears at regular or periodic intervals and remains on the scope
for only an instant.
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IFF will also appear on the PPI indicator, but identification is more
difficult if it is used
instead of the "A" scope. As illustrated in figures 2-3, 2-4, and 2-5, it
appears as a bright
spot, or spots, depending on the antenna speed and ABK code used, and
will always be outboard of
the target indication.
Failure to get a response from any target that is challenged generally
indicates that the target is
hostile. This is not always reliable, however, due to ABK failures, or
the chance that the unit
may be turned off. From this fact, it can be seen how vital trouble-free
IFF operation is to our
ships and planes that rely on the BK and ABK to identify them to other
ships and ground stations.
While interrogating a target, it is possible to receive other IFF signals
from the bearing at
which the antenna trains without detecting a target pip. This is due to
the longer effective range
of IFF.
Reporting distress with IFF.
If the target being challenged sends back a very wide response that
flashes below the trace every
three seconds, it is the emergency or distress signal. However, before
reporting the signal as an
emergency, it is a good practice to cheek to be certain that it is the
extremely wide distress
signal and not the wide pulse of the coded combinations. One reliable
method of checking is to
measure the distance that the IFF indication occupies on the time base.
Since the ABK sends out
an 80-microsecond wide pulse on emergency, the signal will pull down
about seven miles of the
trace line. Comparing this seven-mile wide signal with the two-mile wide
signal of the code
series, you can see that there is no excuse for mistaking the true
distress signal. Not only is the
emergency pulse about four times as broad as the wide reply, but the
distress signal also
appears at the regular three-second interval,-a succession of very wide
signals.
Therefore, if you observe a wide pulse as the first IFF response and are
in doubt about its being
the distress signal, continue to watch the replies closely for nine
seconds. If three wide pulses
appear in succession, it is the real thing, the emergency signal, for the
six codes are made up in
a manner that makes it impossible for the 21-microsecond reply to appear
three times in
succession (it can appear twice, and then some narrow pulses are thrown
in). It is a good
practice to make one or both checks before reporting the signal as
"distress," It must meet these
specifications: (1) at least a seven-mile wide pulse, and (2) pulses
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
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Figure 2-3.
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
Figure 2-4.
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2-10
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
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Figure 2-5.
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
flash on the screen three seconds apart with no variation in width.
Second only in importance to identification is this application of the
Mark III IFF system to the
transmission of distress signals. Whenever a pilot is in trouble and
finds that he must make a
forced landing at sea or in a trackless jungle, he cannot turn on his
radio to send out an S.O.S. to
his home base, if he is in a war zone. He does not want the enemy to
intercept his distress call.
Generally, he does not know what his exact geographical location is so
his message would be of
little help in any event. But by using the emergency position on his ABK
he can show his location
to the search-radar operator. Consequently, he switches to Emergency" on
the ABK control box.
Very likely a radar operator somewhere is searching the horizons.
Detecting the plane, he turns
on the IFF to identify it and on the screen sees the extremely wide
signal flashing below the
trace at three-second intervals. Quickly reporting the bearing and range
of the emergency
signal, the operator continues to track and report the plane until both
it and the emergency
signal disappear from the screen. The rescue plane or ship is promptly
dispatched to the last
reported hearing and range position near which the plane has probably
crashed. The use of IFF
to indicate distress is responsible for the rescue of innumerable pilots
and crewmen of disabled
Allied planes and ships.
The emergency signal is often the indication that a plane has lost its
way. When the distress
signal is picked up at a land station, the information is reported to the
nearest air base. The
apparently aimless course indicates that the pilot has lost his bearing
and communication
silence may be broken in an attempt to contact and give directions that
will set him back on his
course. In ease all attempts to establish contact by radio fail, a plane
is dispatched to the lost
plane's position to lead it to safety.
Using the emergency signal to signify anything unrelated to distress may
have its disadvantages.
In recent operations a carrier task force decided to use the signal as
the code for "the enemy has
broken through our outer battle line." Considerable confusion developed
when the pilot of one of
the patrolling aircraft threw on the emergency switch because engine
trouble was forcing him
down. Unaware that the signal was just the ordinary indication of
distress the force was hastily
prepared for an attack that never materialized.
When you are identifying one target, an emergency pulse may appear on the
scope at some greater
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range without the target being revealed by a pip. But you can range on
the signal by judging
where the leading edge of the pulse appears on the time base and
reporting that figure along with
the bearing to the C.I.C. The target can be plotted from the reports on
the movement of the
signal as it flashes at different ranges along the time base, with the
range always figured to the
point at which the pulse starts to pull down. Pointing the antenna to
maintain maximum
strength of the emergency signals provides more accurate bearing
information on the craft in
trouble.
Always be on the alert for the emergency signal, for prompt and accurate
reporting of this
distress appeal may be the means of saving many lives,
SECURITY
Necessity of safeguarding IFF security.
Because we are entirely dependent on the ABK-BK equipment to determine
which of the ships
and planes detected by radar are friendly (at long range), it is of vital
importance to keep the
apparatus or any information about it from falling into enemy hands. A
similar unit installed in
enemy planes and ships could deceive us completely and would render our
own radar entirely
unreliable.
Security of information must he strictly maintained
to guard against such a possibility. IFF equipment is even more
confidential than the rest of
radar materiel. The regulations applying to strict observance of the
rules of security regarding
radar must be emphatically followed in matters pertaining to IFF. Certain
parts of the ABK
related to the coding operation and the code itself, while classified
"Confidential," are treated in
much the same way as "Secret" material.
The ABK is safeguarded by measures similar to those taken to protect the
bombsight. It is
removed from the plane at the completion of the flight and placed in a
guarded vault for
safekeeping. If it should be necessary to leave the unit in the planes,
an armed guard must be
maintained over the craft carrying the equipment. Even then, certain
confidential parts without
which the unit cannot operate are removed from the ABK as an added
safeguard.
The destructor: the safeguard against enemy possession.
But there is still the problem of maintaining the security of the
equipment when planes fly over
enemy
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2-12
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
territory. There is always the possibility of aircraft being forced down
or shot down with the
ABK itself still in an undamaged or repairable condition. To guard
against this contingency, a
detonator is installed in every ABK unit. This detonator or "destructor"
is an explosive charge
inserted into the side of the cabinet. When exploded, it can destroy the
insides of the unit so
completely that it is impossible for the enemy to determine what the
resulting wreckage
originally was. Composed of thermite, the charge can be set off without
rupturing the case, and
though the terrific heat melts everything already blown up, it cannot
injure the pilot who sets
it off nor can it damage or set fire to the plane. It does a thorough job
of guarding the security of
this important IFF unit.
The designers made certain that the detonator would function regardless
of the fate of the crew of
the airplane. The pilot has two switches to push to explode the
demolition charge if he must land
on hostile ground, so that the foe is rewarded only with a picture of
destruction when he
attempts to investigate IFF. If all the crew are killed, an impact switch
does the job for them. It
sets off the destructor when the plane crashes. The greatest care must be
taken when handling
the detonator itself, for this small bomb can spell doom if carelessly
handled outside the
equipment. Numerous safety precautions are taken to prevent the ABK from
being accidentally
destroyed, as for example. in a rough landing. If the impact switch were
not disconnected
immediately before landing on the home held or on a carrier, such a
landing would set off the
charge.
ADDITIONAL USES OF IFF
By taking advantage of the adaptability of the ABK,
the air forces have extended the range over which radar search
information can be gleaned. In
using only one of the six codes to indicate friend or foe, and assigning
the remaining live to
meanings of a special nature, the airmen scouring the seas for the enemy
can relay invaluable
information without informing the enemy. Suppose that Code No. 2 is to
signify "sighted sub,"
Code No. 3 "sighted convoy." Code No. 4 "sighted enemy battle force,"
Code No, 1 "normal
operating position-okeh-friendly, etc." The radarman on the carrier or
land station tracks
the patrol planes with the interrogator turned on. After he loses the
target pips, he continues to
receive the No. 1 coded signal, possibly from beyond 100 miles, which
tells the operator that
there is nothing to report so far. But as soon as one of the pilots
sights, let us say, a
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convoy by visual means or with his own radar, he switches the ABK to Code
No. 3. The search
operator observes that he is no longer getting No. 1 response; instead,
he recognizes the new code
as No. 3. The bearing and range of the significant signal is reported at
once. Long before the
search radar could detect the convoy's approach, the ship has obtained
useful information, and
transmission of this advance word has been accomplished without breaking
radio silence.
Reference was made previously to the possibility of following a plane's
or ship's progress by
observing the IFF signals changing bearing and range. In plane-tracking
operations, the target
pip often disappears, and in spite of all the operator's efforts, he is
unable to bring the antenna
to bear on the target with sufficient energy to produce a pip.
Consequently, he must report that
he has lost the target.
But the operator could have turned on the IFF and checked near the
bearing at which the pip
faded out. It is possible that the radarman could again have found the
target pip when he trained
the antenna to get the strongest IFF responses. In case the target pip
failed to reappear, due to
the extreme distance or adverse conditions, the operator could continue
to track the aircraft by
following the IFF signals.
By checking the range of the nearest edge of the IFF signal on the time
base, an approximate
range on the target can be obtained; bearing readings are taken when the
pulse pips flash at
maximum strength. Therefore, the distances over which a plane can be
tracked are greatly
extended, and the likelihood of losing the target is materially reduced
when IFF is used as a
tracking aid.
IFF has its fade zones in which the signals disappear, just as in the case of air-search radars. So
continue interrogating, a "bogey" may become "friendly" when he gets out
of an IFF fade zone.
IFF fades, however, do not occur in the same places as the fades of the
associated radar.
Consequently, the target may be fading while the IFF response is very
strong; next, the target
signal may give a strong indication while the IFF has faded out
completely.
The ABK transponder is the universal IFF unit used by the Army, Navy, and
Marine Air Forces
and by the Allied Navies and Air Forces as well. Needless to say, the
chief use of IFF is for
identification of ships and planes. In our all-out anti-submarine
campaign in the Atlantic. it
was extremely useful when ships were detected by radar and later sighted
by lookouts, the
appearance of the low-lying ship superstructures resembling surfaced
submarine conning
towers. Any indecision as to identity was dispelled as soon as
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2-13
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
the target was challenged by the BL. The absence of the IFF response was
the signal to press
home the attack. This reliable system saved our forces afloat from the
confusion that often
brings about self-inflicted losses. IFF has been especially helpful to
our own submarines and
PT boats, enabling them to operate with some assurance that they will not
be attacked by our
destroyers.
EQUIPMENT FAILURES
The ABK transpondor is the most carefully and frequently checked and
tested of all the radar
equipment. It is inspected after each flight to make certain that it is
in perfect condition. Parts
of the set, such as the tubes, are replaced at the end of relatively
short operating periods to
insure against equipment failure due to old or worn-out parts. In spite
of all the precautions
taken to prevent ABK failures, the unit does develop troubles that render
it inoperative. There
is no visual indication that the equipment is not operating. However,
there is an outlet jack into
which earphones can be plugged. All the pilot (or operator aboard ship
that is being challenged)
hears is noise of the transmitter turning on and off, providing that the
set is being triggered at
the time. Yet there is always the chance that silence in the phones
indicates that the unit is not
being challenged, rather than not working due to some failure.
The BK or ABK must always be checked when there is a possibility of being
challenged by one of
our own planes or ships. Causes of trouble and failures in early models
of the ABK have been
studied, and modifications in the later sets have eliminated many of the
shortcomings. Since the
Mark III IFF system is composed of special vacuum tube circuits and
mechanical gadgets that
are all subject to failure, the chances are that only about 80% of all
our ABKs function
correctly all of the time. That means that what we sometimes think is an
enemy contact is
actually friendly. There is also the possibility that the transmissions
of transpondors or
interrogators may be blocked from some directions by either ship or
aircraft structure.
In the Southwest Pacific, according to official reports, our naval
gunners have mistakenly shot
down Liberators, Mitchells, and Lightnings that failed to show IFF. In
the Mediterranean theatre,
our anti-aircraft gunners have shot down troop laden airplanes through
some IFF failure. We
also have reports of U. S. Destroyers attacking our own PT's, and PT
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skippers have, on occasion, launched torpedoes at a friendly destroyer.
Tragedies such as these
have been variously attributed to equipment failure of the ABK units,
failure of the
interrogators, failure to turn on the ABKs, or no IFF installation.
Conditions of poor visibility due to weather conditions or time of day
prevented the lookouts
from correcting mistaken decisions on the status of sighted objects.
Enumeration of these
unfortunate incidents gives some idea of how important it is to have the
IFF system working
properly.
LIMITATIONS OF MARK III IFF
So far the IFF has seemed to be an easily understood, smoothly operating
piece of equipment,
and so it is, if all of the parts work as well as they appear to on
paper. This unfortunately, does
not always hold true. Because of the obvious value of identification
radar, it is important to
understand thoroughly its capabilities and its limitations. It must be
constantly borne in mind
that Mark III IFF is an aid in determining friendly or enemy character of
a target and cannot be
relied upon to give 100% identification.
Non-directional interrogation and range identification.
A few examples will serve to show just how much you can depend on all
indications given by IFF
of a friendly radar contact. First, assume that you have discovered two
surface contacts at the
same range (8,000 yards) but on different bearings on your radar. One is
friendly, and the
other is enemy, but unfortunately you do not know that. The fact that all
surface-search radars
use the non-directional IFF antennas leads to further trouble. If you
stop your radar antenna
on the first contact, and challenge it with your IFF, you will get a
response which will tell you
that it is friendly. Then you rotate the radar antenna to the second
contact, challenge it, and get a
second friendly response! Figure 2-6 will show you what happened.
When you stopped your radar antenna on the enemy ship 8,000 yards away,
you got an echo on
your scope at 8,000 yards. You also received an IFF response from the
friendly ship 8,000
yards away, which led you to think that the enemy ship was friendly. Of
course, when you
pointed the radar antenna at the friendly ship you saw its echo at 8,000
yards on the "A" scope,
with the same IFF response at 8,000 yards. Remember that this
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2-14
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
condition can exist, and avoid being too quick to report two friendly
contacts when it arises.
Should you have a friendly and an enemy ship at the same range when using
the non-directional
interrogator antenna, several checks on the position of the IFF signal in
relation to the target
pips will reveal which is friendly and which is enemy. The IFF response
will always appear
immediately to the right of the target pip. Since the possibility of a
friendly and enemy ship
maintaining the same range relationship to you over a period of time is
quite unlikely, the pip
which becomes separated from the IFF signal is the enemy ship. If there
is no BN connected
with your surface-search radar, you must depend upon your air-search
radar and its associated
IFF system to challenge the surface contacts.
Wide beam of BL and faulty identification.
Though designed as a directional antenna, the directivity of the BL array
is limited, and it is to
some extent subject to the limitations of non-directional interrogators.
It follows, then, that
some of the problems encountered with the non-directional system may also
be a source of
confusion when using air-search radar with the directional interrogator.
Inability to
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identify positively two air contracts at identical ranges may result, for
it is not unusual to
observe IFF responses for a full 360 degrees, especially at short ranges. The
limited directional
characteristics are such that replies should be expected throughout a
wide variation in bearing,
especially below 12 miles range in the case of surface targets and below
50 miles range in the
case of air targets.
Consider another confusing situation: assume that you have picked up a
surface contact at
35,000 yards, and wish to challenge it with your IFF. If you have no 13L
or BN connected with
the surface-search radar, you must depend on the IFF equipment connected
to the air-search
set to do the challenging. The IFF band of frequencies lies just below
that band used for our
air-search sets, so you may expect the radiation characteristics of IFF
radar to be very similar
to those of the air-search sets. This means that radiation from IFF radar
will not lie close to
the surface of the water. Therefore, when you challenge the contact at
35,000 yards, it is very
probable that no friendly indication will appear on your radar at that
range even if the contact
is friendly. The contact is unidentified until it closes to a range at
which enough of your BL
energy reaches the ABK to trigger it. That range may be as
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Figure 2-6.
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
short as 10,000 yards depending on the following factors: (1) height of
the transpondor
antenna above the surface of the sea, (2) materiel condition of both
transpondor and
interrogator, and (3) radiation pattern of the interrogator antenna in
the vertical and
horizontal planes.
As was pointed out earlier, however, you may get IFF responses from
airplanes at greater
ranges than you can see the actual echo from the plane for two reasons:
first, the IFF radiation
is directed upward from the water, just as air-search radar radiation is,
and second, the power
originates in an ABK, while power is only "reflected back" to our search
radar after the search
pulse hits an object. Inasmuch as the power transmitted by an ABK is
greater than that reflected
from the plane carrying the ABK, it is possible for the coded IFF
response to appear below the
trace even though the search radar has not yet indicated the presence of
a target.
"A sense of false security must not be permitted because many friendly
blips from a group of
planes can be seen on the radar screen. Enemy planes may trait such a
group and attempt to take
advantage of their transpondors to press home an attack. It is also
possible for blips from
friendly aircraft to conceal enemy surface craft."
360 degree IFF resulting from back and minor lobes.
Because of the wide horizontal beam, back radiation, and prominent side
lobes of the BL
antennas, you will find that a contact at short range can be interrogated
almost continuously as
the antenna rotates through 3600. Under these conditions interrogation is
non-directional and
subject to the same limitations described under non-directional IFF. It
is often possible to
reduce the power of the interrogator until only, the
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major lobe of radiated energy has sufficient power to activate the
transpondor. This can be done
by turning down the plate voltage of the BL until you get an IFF signal
only from the direction of
the contact. As soon as you have finished the interrogation, turn up the
voltage to its original
setting.
Red and green band triggering.
For some reason, the Mark III IFF system was designed to operate in a
band of frequencies that
slightly overlaps the lower end of the air-search radar frequency band.
This is illustrated in
figure 2-7. The result is that a radar operator is placed in a difficult
situation under certain
conditions. With an air-search radar set tuned to any frequency within
the red band, it is often
possible for the radar itself to trigger the ABK every time the antenna
points in the direction of
the transpondor. The result is an IFF indication flashing above the trace
on the "A" scope
continuously, even though the BL is turned off. When the ABK is out of
adjustment, it may
overlap into the green band of frequencies as well (indicated by the
dotted line on the graph),
affecting green band radars as well as those in the red band. Moreover,
if you challenge the
target with your BL you can expect to receive the usual Mark III
indication below the trace, but
not necessarily at the same time as the upward deflection. That gives
three separate indications
on the scope: the regular echo, the upward IFF signal, and the downward
IFF signal. The latter
two may or may not appear at the same time, depending on the relative
frequencies of the search
radar and the BL radar, which determine, of course, the time that the ABK
will respond to each
set. The situation is serious when a number of friendly and enemy planes
are flying fairly close
together, since the "A" scope becomes a mass of bobbing echoes and
downward IFF signals that
have no apparent relationship to each other.
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Figure 2-7.
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2-16
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GENERAL IFF PRINCIPLES |
We have had an increasing number of reports from the Pacific Area stating
that a response
resembling the indications given by the obsolete Mark II IFF has been
received. Authorities
believe the Japanese are using the compromised ABE, since it

Figure 2-8. IFF interference.
puts the IFF response above the trace line. Hence the "positive" (above
the time base) signals
are to be regarded as no identification whatever-not as foe
identification. IFF signals below the
line identify "friendlies" whether or not accompanied by IFF above the
line.
IFF interference and code readability.
Since the ABK is able to receive challenges from any and all directions,
there may be several
dozen interrogators challenging at once. Yet the ABK is equal to this
situation, for it can answer
up to 30 different challengers at one time without interference. Special
provisions have been
made to prevent ABK's operating near each other from triggering one
another should their
frequencies coincide.
On the other hand, imagine how many IFF signals
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are received when challenging several planes in a group or a large formation
of planes, all with
their ABK's on. The whole scope will appear as a flashing, confusing
muddle, making it
impossible to distinguish the signal of any one of the planes or to make
out the code. Actually,
codes are almost meaningless because each answering ABK will respond at a
slightly different
time and all codes will overlap. Under these circumstances the radar
operator can at least
recognize that responses consist of all narrow poises, a combination of
narrow and wide, or
emergency signals.
IFF signals too narrow on long range.
Selection of proper range scales during interrogation is another problem.
It is exceedingly
difficult to distinguish the IFF signals when the long-range scale is
being used. The narrow IFF
indications especially, are so compressed on the long range scale that it
is next to impossible to
tell an IFF indication from BL Pulse interference. Due to the thinness of
the IFF signals on this
scale, considerable difficulty may be encountered in reading the codes,
provided, of course, that
it is possible to distinguish the IFF from the flashing interference. It
is wise whenever possible
to use the mid-range scale or the short range for identification of
contacts. Either of these
scales gives better definition to the IFF signals; hence, identification
is more reliable and less
difficult.
SUMMARY
It is necessary to be especially alert when challenging a target, in
order to recognize any or all
of the confusing situations discussed in this section. In spite of the
limitations of IFF radar,
however, it is our only system for long-range identification of radar
contacts. Combining a
realization of its limitations with an up-to-the-minute understanding of
the tactical situation
will support the system so that satisfactory results may be obtained.
In the future, IFF will continue to serve our forces afloat and airborne,
with increasing
reliability, and in valuable capacities not hinted at in this manual.
Thorough understanding of
this phase of radar, and intelligent, alert interpretation of IFF may
well be responsible for
saving a ship or winning an important battle.
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RADAR OPERATOR'S MANUAL |
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