Aerostats positioned 10,000 feet over Americas southern border provide effective intrusion alarms
by Tech. Sgt. John B. Dendy IV, photos by Tech. Sgt. John Lasky
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Hey, hey hey, drug smugglers. Say hi to Fat Alberts burly remote-controlled balloons officially known as the tethered Aerostat Radar Systems.
Aerostats perform very unusual and highly sensitive communications duties for elite government law enforcement and broadcasting organizations in situations where no other practical way to do a job exists.
Like a flying intrusion detector, 11 aerostats with inboard radars troll for drug-hauling aircraft, along an arc that stretches from Puerto Rico to Yuma, Ariz. In the early 1990s, one aerostat started flying the powerful antenna for a Voice of America-like TV station, TV Marti. The daily broadcasts show and tell the people of Cuba what their strongman doesnt want them to know.
Aerostats are packed to their fins with special radar payloads that would have mere hot air balloons, airships or blimps hissing with envy. Airmen retired and active-duty are involved. A contracted team of 30 people runs each radar site. Pairs of ground radar airmen visit those outposts for quality assurance. A few calibrate the sensitive onboard gear each year.
Those airmen nurture the future of counterdrug aviations front line in the United States. Americas current 12-ship aerostat force runs on gasoline, helium and oxygen to stay aloft. There are three sizes of aerostats, but soon there will only be one, because payload sizes have shrunk. Expect each of todays federal aerostats to be twice as big as a Goodyear blimp within five years.
The current Fat Alberts use 275,000 to 590,000 cubic feet of helium. The 420,000 size will be the norm, said retired Chief Master Sgt. Stan Zduniak, the tethered aerostat radar system program manager. He and most of the military team work for the Air Combat Command Program Management Squadron, Newport News, Va.
Most balloons hang around for five years. When the TV Marti aerostat was replaced last year, a quality assurance team accompanied retired Chief Master Sgt. Mike Pallone, director of engineering and technical operations, Office of Cuba Broadcasting, to view the new aerostat at Tethered Communications in Elizabeth City, N.C.
Fat Alberts come to life thanks to laser cutting and chemical bonding processes on the spacious production floors there or at ILC Dover, in Dover, Del. The newest aerostat is up and running fine, Pallone said.
Airborne intrusion system
The Treasury, Justice, Transportation and Defense departments ability to deter drug cargo smugglers depends on an airborne intrusion system. Since Americas southern flank isnt exactly endowed with high-altitude peaks to place such radars on, hovering aerostats with onboard radar do the job.
Fat Alberts radars work with fixed-wing aircraft radar, to show the threats in North Americas skies. Airmen and federal agents use the live radar data feed to distinguish airborne drug planes from the clutter of daily air traffic headed for America from the south.
The sum of those sensor warnings translates into a call for U.S. Customs, Border Patrol, Coast Guard or Air Force aircraft to meet airborne threats that inevitably turn up onscreen. Examples of threats range from Payne Stewarts ill-fated jet, to pilots making airdrops and strange stops under falsified flight plans.
Federal responders include the Florida Air National Guards F-15 fighter airmen, on air defense alert duty at Homestead Air Reserve Base near Miami
Wow...strange considering the plane's registration:
AFZAL HAMEED
Co-Owned
30 OLD RUDNICK LN
DOVER, DE 19901 US
Great info, hattend!