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  2. AirNav Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AirNav_Systems

    AirNav Systems is a Tampa-based global flight tracking and data services company founded in 2001. [1] The company operates a flight tracking website and mobile app called Radarbox which offers worldwide tracking of commercial and general aviation flights.

  3. Nebo-M - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebo-M

    The Nebo-M [1] or Nebo-ME (in Cyrillic: 55Ж6МЕ «Небо-МЕ», Nebo means "sky") also known as RLM-ME or 55Zh6ME (export version) [2] is an integrated multi-functional radar system that features a multiple programmable multi-band design radars and a central data fusion.

  4. Flightradar24 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flightradar24

    Flightradar24 ADS-B receiver based on jetvision Radarcape [24]. Flightradar24 aggregates data from six sources: [25] Automatic dependent surveillance – broadcast (ADS-B). The principal source is a large number of ground-based ADS-B receivers, which collect data from any aircraft in their local area that are equipped with an ADS-B transponder and feed this data to the internet in real time.

  5. Nebo-SVU - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebo-SVU

    The Nebo-SVU (also known as 1L119) (in Cyrillic: Небо-СВУ, 1Л119) is a very high frequency (VHF) multi-functional radar and the first radar with an active electronically scanned array (AESA) antenna operating at meter wavelengths.

  6. OPS-24 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPS-24

    The OPS-24 is a shipborne three-dimensional air search radar adopting active electronically scanned array (AESA) technology.. OPS-24 was developed by the Technical Research and Development Institute (TRDI) of the Ministry of Defence, and manufactured by the Mitsubishi Electric.

  7. Flight recorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_recorder

    A modern flight data recorder; the underwater locator beacon is the small cylinder on the far right. (Translation of warning message in French: "Flight recorder do not open".)

  8. Russian air surveillance radars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_air_surveillance...

    The Nizhny Novgorod Research Institute of Radio Engineering (Russian acronym: NNIIRT) has since 1948 developed a number of radars. [1] These were mainly radars in the VHF-band, and many of which featured developments in technology that represented "first offs" in the Soviet Union.

  9. AI.24 Foxhunter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI.24_Foxhunter

    AI.24 Foxhunter radar. Much of the radar system and related operational software was developed at the Radar Research Laboratory of GEC-Marconi Elliott Avionic Systems Ltd., initially at the Elliott Automation plant in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom, and latterly (from 1981 to 2004) as Marconi Avionics at the (formerly the Xerox site of a matrix of interconnected grey portacabins ...