Landing Radio Altimeter

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A Landing Radio Altimeter for Small Aircraft

Matjaž Vidmar, S53MV

An accurate radio altimeter with a dual-channel (quadrature) homodyne


receiver is presented in this article. This new design improves the accuracy
while operating in the standard 4.3GHz radio-altimeter allocation. The new
radio altimeter is intended as a landing aid for small general-aviation
aircraft, experimental aircraft and UAVs and is equipped with a simple
synthesized-voice human interface.

Introduction

Aviation radio altimeters are usually designed as short-range FM radars


operating in the 4.2-4.4GHz frequency band [1]. Their main application are
instrumented approaches and landings of large commercial aircraft. The
accuracy and resolution of aviation altimeters is usually limited to a few feet
due to the limited available bandwidth of 200MHz in the 4.3GHz frequency
band. This accuracy is considered sufficient even for the flare during an
autoland manoeuvre of a large commercial jet aircraft.

Most of the design efforts went into developing highly-reliable radio


altimeters that allow a parallel operation of two or three instruments on the
same aircraft. Most aviation radio altimeters have separate transmit and
receive antennas although considerable efforts were invested into developing
a single-antenna radio altimeter [2].

Radio altimeters are not considered of much use on small aircraft, since the
latter usually operate in visual meteorological conditions. Since the approach
and landing speeds of small aircraft are three to four times smaller than
those of large jet aircraft, an autoland of a small aircraft requires a
comparably more accurate altimeter. Current aviation radio altimeters are
not accurate enough to provide useful information during the flare of a small
aircraft.

Nevertheless, bad landings are certainly the number one cause for accidents
of small aircraft. The skills of their “weekend” pilots are hardly comparable
to those of commercial airline professionals. Night-time landings, poor
visibility in bad weather conditions, strong and gusty winds, local dangerous
obstacles like high-voltage power lines distracting the pilot or simply a tired
pilot and sick passengers after a long trip may all add up to a bad landing.
Emergency landings of both glider aircraft or after an engine failure are even
more difficult. In the latter case it is particularly difficult for the pilot to
estimate the altitude of his aircraft above a water (sea) surface or any other
landscape without known reference points.

New composite materials allow aircraft designers to push the aerodynamics


to the limits, maximizing the glide ratio, fuel efficiency and/or range. These
new aircraft are no longer easy to land, like the example shown on figure 1.
In all these cases an accurate radio altimeter could solve many problems,
effectively preventing both landing accidents and/or unnecessary wear of the
landing gear.
Figure 1 – A high-performance, but difficult-to-land motorglider.

Yet another application for accurate radio altimeters are UAVs. These
unmanned aircraft are even smaller and slower. While GPS and/or pressure
altimeters are accurate enough for en-route navigation, a high-accuracy
radio altimeter is required for an automated landing. It therefore makes
sense to investigate the design of a short-range, but very accurate radio
altimeter. An improved FM radar operating in the standard 4.2-4.4GHz
radio-altimeter allocation will be presented in this article.

Radio-altimeter operation

The principle of operation of a radio altimeter is explained on figure 2.


Aviation radio altimeters are short-range, low-power, continuous-wave
radars and generally require two separate transmit and receive antennas.
The radio-wave propagation delay is usually too short to switch a single
antenna between the transmitter and the receiver.
Figure 2 – Principle of operation of a radio altimeter.

In order to operate correctly, the receiving antenna of a radio altimeter


should only receive the reflected signal from the runway and avoid the radio
signal coming directly from the transmitting antenna. The radio-altimeter
antennas have to be widely separated to avoid unwanted crosstalk between
the two antennas. Although electronic filtering of the crosstalk allows the
design of single-antenna radio altimeters, the operation of the latter is
usually limited above a specified minimum altitude.

Most aviation radio altimeters are frequency-modulated radars. The carrier


frequency of the transmitter is swept continuously in a given frequency
range. Since the received signal is delayed, the receive frequency differs
from the transmitter. If the rate-of-change of the transmitter frequency is
constant, the delay and therefore altitude are directly proportional to the
measured frequency difference between the transmitter and receiver.

The design of a conventional FM radio-altimeter is shown on figure 3. The


sweep waveform is triangular and both slopes are usually used for the
altitude measurement to compensate for the Doppler shift due to the vertical
speed of the aircraft. The sweep frequency is usually between 50Hz and
300Hz. The higher limit is imposed by the receiver thermal noise, the lower
limit is the ability of the radio altimeter to eliminate the Doppler shift in the
case of a descending or climbing aircraft.

Figure 3 – Conventional FM radio-altimeter design.


Most aviation radio altimeters operate in the 4.2-4.4GHz frequency band.
Out of the 200MHz available only the central part of about 150MHz is usually
used. The 4.3GHz (7cm) frequency band is a compromise between the
bandwidth available (accuracy of the measurement) and the surface
roughness of the runway or other reflecting target.

The transmitter power ranges from 10mW (+10dBm) up to 500mW


(+27dBm). The directivity of both transmit and receive antennas is limited
to about 10dBi to allow the operation of the radio altimeter at moderate
pitch and bank angles of the aircraft.

The receiver is a homodyne design using a mixer to derive the difference


between the transmit and receive frequencies. The beat frequency is usually
less than 1MHz. Part of the transmitter signal is also used as the local
oscillator for the receiver. Some radio-altimeter designs may simply use the
crosstalk between the transmit and receive antennas to feed the LO signal in
the receive mixer.

The beat signal is filtered first, then amplified and limited. A frequency
counter drives the altitude indicator and various altitude alarms if required.
Of course, the aircraft-installation delay (mainly the cables connecting the
antennas to the electronics of the radio altimeter) has to be subtracted from
the measured altitude.

The accuracy and resolution of a radio altimeter are limited by the RF


bandwidth available as shown on figure 4. For a given frequency sweep, the
electronics produces a certain beat frequency with a limited number of
transitions that can be counted. As the measured altitude changes, the beat
pattern shifts and the counter result actually makes several oscillations
between two adjacent values.
Figure 4 – Accuracy and resolution of a radio altimeter.

There are different ways to improve the accuracy and resolution of a radio
altimeter. The simplest solution is to increase the frequency sweep up to
400MHz as suggested in [3]. A better solution is to add a low-frequency
(around 10Hz) triangular dither waveform to the main triangular sweep. In
this way the oscillations between two adjacent values are averaged out
during several measurements, however some additional bandwidth is
required for the dither!

The solution suggested in [4] and described in this article is to add a second
receiving channel in quadrature. In this way the number of available
transitions is doubled and the accuracy and resolution are improved by a
factor of two. Further, the low-frequency dither amplitude can be halved so
that less bandwidth is wasted for the dither. Finally, a quadrature design of a
homodyne receiver is required anyway to extract all of the available
information out of the received signal!

Radio-altimeter design

An accurate radio altimeter with a dual-channel (quadrature) homodyne


receiver was developed and built. The main application of this radio altimeter
was to help the pilot during the landing of a small aircraft. The block
diagram of this new design is presented on figure 5.

Figure 5 – Block diagram of the landing radio altimeter.

The transmitter modulator includes two triangular oscillators: the main


sweep at 150Hz and the dither at 15Hz. The dither amplitude is set to about
10% of the main sweep amplitude. The sum of both waveforms is applied to
the microwave VCO operating directly at 4.3GHz. The VCO includes a
BFP420 amplifier and an interdigital filter in the feedback. Due to the
relatively narrow sweep, only the central microstrip resonator is tuned with a
single BBY51 varactor [5].
The VCO is followed by two amplifier-buffer stages using another BFP420
bipolar transistor and a MGF4918 HEMT. The latter produces a RF power of
about 40mW (+16dBm) at 4.3GHz. Most of this signal is fed to the transmit
antenna, while a small fraction (about a milliwatt) is coupled and sent
through a lowpass filter to provide the homodyne local oscillator.

The receiver RF front end includes a single-stage LNA with another MGF4918
HEMT and two IAM81008 balanced mixers in quadrature. The RF and LO
signals are split with two Wilkinson hybrids. Different length microstrip lines
are used to obtain the required phase shifts. The (now obsolete) IAM81008
mixers are used beyond their designed frequency range in this application,
therefore the overall noise figure of the receiver is in the 15...20dB range.

The RF section of the radio altimeter is built on two printed-circuit boards


(transmitter and receiver) in microstrip technology. Each board is 80mm
long and 20mm wide. Both boards are etched on 19 mils thick “Ultralam
2000” teflon laminate (Rogers)with a dielectric constant of 2.43. The upper
side of both boards is shown on figure 6, while the bottom side is not etched
to act as the microstrip groundplane. Both boards are soldered in a frame
made of thin brass sheet for shielding purposes.
Figure 6 – Microstrip printed-circuit boards of the RF front end.

Both in-phase and quadrature beat signals are filtered and amplified. The
dual-channel amplifier has a common AGC. The AGC time constant has to be
chosen carefully to minimize the effects of signal dropouts due to poor
reflections. Noise is removed by two Schmitt-trigger stages driving a pulse-
former circuit that produces one output pulse for every zero crossing of any
of the two input signals.

The pulses are fed to a frequency counter implemented inside a 8-bit PIC
16F84 microprocessor. The gate of the counter is not synchronized to the
main sweep nor to the triangular dither. The microprocessor however
performs digital averaging (filtering) of the measured result. Due to the
relatively low frequencies involved, a clock frequency of 20MHz is more than
sufficient for the PIC 16F84.

The result of the measurement is displayed on a 4-digit LCD: hundreds, tens


and units of feet and one decimal indicating quarters of feet. The
microprocessor also removes unnecessary information from the LCD: the
decimal is blanked above 10 feet and both the units and decimal are blanked
above 100 feet. The internal EEPROM of the PIC 16F84 stores the offset of
the aircraft-installation delay that has to be subtracted from the measured
result.

A numerical display is of limited use during the quick and critical flare of a
small aircraft. Therefore the radio altimeter is equipped with a voice
synthesizer built around the ISD2560P voice-recorder chip (analog EEPORM
storage). The ISD2560P contains 21 pre-recorded voice messages actually
using less than half of the total storage area of the chip. The actual message
telling the current altitude in feet is selected by the PIC 16F84 and played
back by the ISD2560P into a loudspeaker or better into the intercom
installation on-board the aircraft.

The electronics package of the radio-altimeter prototype is 140mm long,


66mm wide and 42mm high and is shown on figures 7 and 8. The cross-
section of the package is mainly defined by the size of the front-panel LCD.
The modulator, transmitter and receiver RF stages are located on the bottom
side as shown on figure 7. SMA connectors are used for both antennas to
keep the weight and size as small as practical in place of the commonly used
TNCs.
Figure 7 – Bottom view: modulator, transmitter and receiver.

The dual-channel IF signal amplification and processing, microprocessor and


voice synthesizer are located on the top side as shown on figure 8. Since
both the PIC 16F84 and ISD2560P had to be reprogrammed several times
during the experiments, dual-in-line packaged versions of both chips were
installed in sockets in the prototype. Of course, most of the remaining
components are SMDs placed on the copper side of the single-sided printed-
circuit boards.
Figure 8 – Top view: IF processing, microprocessor and voice chip.

The offset to compensate for the aircraft-installation delay is set by a single


pushbutton on the rear panel. A quick depression of this pushbutton just
shows the value stored in the EEPROM on the LCD. A long depression (more
than 6 seconds) actually writes the new value into the EEPROM, setting the
display to zero. This operation is therefore conveniently performed on
ground before the actual flight.

Radio altimeters are usually installed on large aircraft with fuselages made
from conducting materials like aluminum or carbon-fiber composites. In this
case is relatively easy to obtain a good isolation between the transmit and
receive antennas. Further, the results are quite predictable regardless of the
actual type of aircraft.

Unfortunately, many small aircraft have non-conducting fuselages made of


fabric, wood or glass-fiber-epoxy. Additionally, wood and glass-fiber
composites are part of the structure of small aircraft, therefore large holes
for radio-altimeter antennas can not be cut in the fuselage without
compromising the structural strength of the aircraft. On the other hand,
internal antennas are a viable solution on aircraft with transparent fuselages
for microwaves.

A successful internal radio-altimeter antenna design is shown on figure 9.


The antenna includes a linearly-polarized patch with air dielectric installed
inside a cavity. Choosing the correct size of the cavity significantly decreases
the unwanted coupling between the two radio-altimeter antennas. A quarter-
wavelength choke around the cavity further decreases the coupling. The
cavity and choke walls also act as a practical spacer when the antenna is
placed on the glass-fiber-composite floor of the fuselage.
Figure 9 – Radio-altimeter antenna for transparent fuselages.

The antenna shown on figure 9 is relatively simple to manufacture from thin


brass sheet. It achieves a gain of more than 11dBi and an impedance
matching of about 15dB across the whole 4.2-4.4GHz radio-altimeter band.
Of course the antenna has to be tuned to the actual glass-fiber fuselage
thickness.

Practical results

The described radio-altimeter prototype including the antennas was installed


on a motorglider aircraft (figure 1) where it was practically tested in several
hundred landings on different runways and in different weather conditions
(different soil moisture) during almost two years. Of course, the
performance of any radio altimeter depends heavily on the soil reflectivity
and roughness.

The described radio-altimeter was found to operate up to about 1000 feet


over average (grass) surfaces. The range is much higher on well-reflecting
surfaces like still water while it may drop to 500 feet under unfavourable
conditions (trees). The range of this design is mainly limited by the relatively
high noise figure of the receiver and low transmitter power. Both could be
improved using better components. Since this radio altimeter was mainly
intended as a landing aid operating during the final approach and flare of a
small aircraft, a range of 500 feet was considered sufficient.

The accuracy of the radio altimeter mainly depends on the reflecting target.
Reproducible results were always obtained over smooth, paved (concrete)
runways. Over grass runways the result of the measurement typically
deviates by +/-0.5 feet. This means that dithering is not strictly necessary
over grass runways, since the changes of the grass reflectivity produce a
similar averaging. Without dithering the counter increments are around one
foot in a quadrature design in the standard 4.2-4.4GHz band. Unfortunately,
on some rare occasions the reflectivity of grass runways was found so low
that the radio altimeter could not provide any meaningful results.

In addition to a digital altitude display, that is hard to read and is therefore


of limited use during difficult landings, a simple acoustic interface was
successfully tested during practical experiments as shown on figure 10.
Figure 10 – Simple acoustic human interface.

The radio altimeter is switched on at the beginning of the final approach,


when the acoustic signal is an intermittent tone of constant pitch and
variable period. As the aircraft descends down to the runway, the beep
period increases. At the beginning of the flare, the beep period increases to
infinity, the sound therefore becomes a continuous tone. The altitude
information is thereafter relayed by the decreasing tone pitch. The tone pitch
decreases down to zero when the landing gear touches the runway.

Although the described acoustic interface was found very quick and reliable,
supporting the final approach and flare in the most critical configuration of
the aircraft with the flaps and/or spoilers fully deployed, it also required
some additional training for the pilot. An additional disadvantage is that the
simple acoustic signal can easily be confused with beeps originating in other
instruments on-board an aircraft.

Therefore a simple-to-understand voice synthesizer was found necessary.


Practically it was found sufficient to describe the altitude of the aircraft in
feet with 21 different words: minus, zero, half, one, two, three, four, five,
seven, ten, fifteen, twenty, thirty, fifty, seventy, one-hundred, one-hundred-
fifty, two-hundred, three-hundred, four-hundred and five-hundred. The
resolution was intentionally made coarse at higher altitudes to avoid
overloading the pilot with unnecessary information.

Conclusions

A practical landing radio altimeter was developed, built and tested in several
hundred landings. The results of the practical testing show that cheap
electronics can replace expensive maintenance and/or repairs of the landing
gear and/or other damage on a small aircraft.

The radio-altimeter circuit presented in this article can be improved in


several ways. A better RF front end could improve the range and reliability
over poorly-reflecting surfaces. A digital signal processor could perfectly
remove the crosstalk between the two antennas, again improving the
reliability of the instrument over poorly-reflecting surfaces. Finally, if both
quadrature beat signals are fed to a signal processor to measure the phase,
the dithering becomes unnecessary.

References

[1] Werner Mansfeld: “Funkortungs- und Funknavigationsanlagen”, 1994


Hüthig Buch Verlag GmbH, Heidelberg, ISBN 3-7785-2202-7, pages 337-
342.

[2] Leo G. Maloratsky: “An Aircraft Single-antenna FM Radio Altimeter”,


Microwave Journal, May 2003, ISSN 0192-6225.

[3] Giorgos E. Stratakos, Paul Bougas and Kostas Gotsis: “A Low Cost, High
Accuracy Radar Altimeter”, Microwave Journal, February 2000, ISSN 0192-
6225.

[4] Matjaž Vidmar: "Design Improves 4.3-GHz Radio Altimeter Accuracy",


Microwaves&RF, June 2005, ISSN 0745-2993.
[5] Matjaž Vidmar: “A Wideband, Varactor-tuned Microstrip VCO”, Microwave
Journal, June 1999, ISSN 0192-6225.

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