Posted on 04/24/2021 11:37:59 AM PDT by RomanSoldier19
High-end Chinese homemade counter-drone radar technologies are currently on display at the 9th World Radar Expo in Nanjing, capital of east China's Jiangsu Province, addressing the threat posed by drones to both traditional and non-traditional security fields.
The massive use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict last year has shown that more and more countries are equipped with stealth fighters, and anti-stealth and anti-UAV radars, which are in the spotlight of the Nanjing expo.
YLC-48 portable multipurpose reconnaissance radar 
China's first portable phased array radar, the YLC-48 portable multipurpose reconnaissance radar is one example of such frontier technology.
Developed by the No.14 Research Institute of the state-owned China Electronics Technology Group Corporation (CETC), the YLC-48 can be carried by a single soldier because of its small size, a feature highly different from other radar systems of similar function.
Dubbed the "spider web," the YLC-48 can detect low-altitude small and slow targets even in cases of strong noise waves close to the ground. And it can effectively detect and track incoming targets from any angle, said its developer.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.cgtn.com ...
They can hook a laptop to a beer can rack, but it won’t stop drones.
“Let’s all go get a frosty one after the photo!”
“This is our new Z-147 Tall Thing On Back Of Truck.”
The Chinese have a new mess truck.
General Tso’s Chicken for everyone!
i call it general tso’s kitten...
China Develops Helmets for Military Soldiers With Self-Destruct Button"The Chinese military is equipping soldiers stationed in Tibet with newly developed helmets embedded with a self-destruct button.The button will trigger an embedded bomb to go off, killing the soldier.
“At a battalion or brigade level command center, a commander monitors a soldier who is far away by using the navigation system. The commander can activate the self-destruct function of the soldier’s helmet if he can’t get in contact with him,” state-run media China Observer reported on Dec. 27.
Soldiers can also press the button themselves. “If a soldier is seriously wounded and doesn’t want to be captured, he can activate the self-destruct function himself. This can maintain his dignity, as well as prevent the enemy from obtaining this system,” the report stated. The new helmet is part of a so-called “individual soldier digital combat system” given to troops in the Tibet theater command. They face Indian troops at the border, where there were recent skirmishes over disputed territory in the Ladkh region. The system includes an antenna and bomb, night vision multifunctional glasses, and a digital control terminal that can be worn on the arm.
“ i call it general tso’s kitten...”
_________
That’s a good one😂. I’ll have to use that one.
Our USA knows all about it and can copy it. Why, because of all those American students we sent to Red China to study/spy in those Chinese universities as students or grad students. Plus, we sent American scientists & engineers over to China to work in Chinese corporations, industrial plants and even in Chinese defense related research institutions.
We are busy using what our guys in China learned to make America #1 in the world! [sarcasm]
Well, Chinese citizens are government property and not persons, so it’s understandable. That’s communism, the state is god.
Democrats are working feverishly to bring us under that rule, with great success.
and then there’s the “purr purr platter” because there’s something not measuring up with those ribs...
It's like keeping a calendar.
It doesn't stop anything, but it does give you a better sense of when to duck!
No way. Imagine payday night in the barracks. Hey guys... you just press this button. Or they’re gonna have to get a bigger arms room. lol. Is this from the Bee?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.