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  #1  
Old 05-03-2004, 02:48 PM
ocuyler ocuyler is offline
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: 44.41 -75.79
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Default Radar installation

I need advice on radar installation. I removed the radar from my Carver, which was on a mast coming out of the bridge enclosure. It was at the appropriate height above the bimini. It worked great until I needed to get under some fixed bridges. As it was damaged in the building snow collapse this winter, I took the opportunity to remove the mast and repair the hole in the glass.



Now, I'm thinking of re-installing it lower down the front enclosure about foot level on the bridge. It would only see 230 degrees, which is OK.

My concern is about radiation. It's a 2 kW Raymarine. Do the microwaves penetrate the fiberglass and shoot though to the bridge and salon? If so, is there any danger in that?

I’d rather not go to the effort of a tilt-up or telescoping mast unless there are real conserns. Having had cancer once, I'd rather not share space with that disease again...

Any comments, sources or links would be greatly appreciated.
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Old 05-03-2004, 03:31 PM
ocuyler ocuyler is offline
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Default Re: Radar installation

I know I'm replying to my own question, but here's what I found:

OSHA has determined that the recommended maximum safe level of exposure to microwaves is 0.2 milliwatts per centimeter squared. The average intensity can be as high as 0.8 (milliwatts per centimeter squared) when the scanner is stationary. At a distance of 7 to 10 feet from the scanner, the average intensity drops to safe levels (i.e. below 0.2 mW/cm2).

Crewmembers should be briefed about the hazards of RF energy and instructed to avoid the scanner by a minimum horizontal distance of 6 feet and a vertical distance of 2 feet when the radar is operating. Crewmembers should be briefed to not remain within the hazardous area for prolonged periods.

During normal radar operation, the average exposure is reduced, because the scanner rotates and a person is exposed only when the beam sweeps past. For example, a person standing three feet away from a four-foot rotating scanner is exposed to less than 20 percent of the average radiation level of a stationary beam. Exposures to microwave radiation above the recommended safe limits are most likely to occur in the immediate vicinity of a transmitting scanner when it is stationary. When the scanner is rotating for normal radar operation, average exposure is below the recommended safe limits; even at points as close as 3 feet.

Information "borrowed" from SailNet .
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