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Defence Security

Blighter reveals its longest range radar system

Cambridge based Blighter has unveiled its longest-range smart border surveillance radar system which can detect a person 15km or 9.3 miles away with just 4 Watts of power – that’s the same as what is needed to power a mobile phone or a modern LED light bulb.

Above: The Blighter B422 long-range smart border surveillance e-scan radar system can detect a person 15km or 9.3 miles away with just four watts of power.
Courtesy Blighter

According to Blighter, this extended range means earlier interception of intruders and significant cost savings for border security operators. With its ‘person at 15km’ detection range, the Blighter B422LR (long-range) border surveillance system can now monitor an area of 707km² compared with 201km² for a radar with a ‘person at 8km’ range. 

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Blighter’s export-friendly B422LR border surveillance system provides up to 360-degrees of pure electronic scanning coverage with no mechanical rotation using static, low power, solid-state transmitters. This low power, low bandwidth system can be operated using solar panels and has no need for additional forced air cooling making it ideal for remote operation along national borders.

Mark Radford, co-founder and chief technology officer (CTO) at Blighter, said: “This new ultra-reliable long-range e-scan radar enhances our leadership position in the global border surveillance market. Our radar’s ability to detect a person 15km away, or a crawler 6.4km away, in all weathers and in complex terrains and with just four watts of transmission power, makes the case for adopting our solution even more compelling. 

“As our recent record order book shows, governments and border forces are increasingly adopting our e-scan radars as the primary detection sensors for their long-range remote surveillance systems. With the extended range, customers will not only be able to detect and intercept targets earlier but with a larger area covered by each radar system, the number of radars, towers and the supporting infrastructure needed will be reduced.”

Blighter’s B422LR border surveillance radar system uses frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) transmission technology, combined with sensitive micro-Doppler target detection. This means the radar has a small communications bandwidth requirement and therefore needs only a fraction of the transmitter power used by traditional security radar systems and dramatically less than classic radar systems.

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“Our radar’s low size, weight and power (SWaP) profile coupled with the extended range is a huge benefit to border authorities,” added Mark Radford. “But it is also vital that the radars are easy to integrate with our customers’ command and control (C2) systems. We achieve this using our BlighterNexus AI-assisted Hub.”

Blighter’s B422LR works with BlighterNexus to ease integration of the remote radars with command and control (C2) systems to provide border authorities with a common operating picture (COP), a real-time, unified view of the border environment. BlighterNexus also optimises target detection capabilities while reducing training and operational costs as the AI-assisted software automates setup, configuration and adjustment of multiple radars to deliver optimum performance even in changing weather conditions.

Blighter’s radar products are export-friendly and not subject to U.S. International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) neither are they governed by the European Union’s dual-use export control regulations. Mark Radford said: “Our ITAR-free status and the licensing of our products for commercial and military applications give us a strategic advantage in the global border security market, making us easy to do business with while reducing considerably the licensing requirements for our customers when buying and deploying our technology.”

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