Skip to content
Roger Simmons Roger Simmons

Birds, Words, Pics + TV

  • Home
  • All Posts
    • Orlando Wetlands
    • Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    • Lake Apopka Wildlife Drive
    • Joe Overstreet Road
    • UCF Arboretum
    • Fort DeSoto Park
  • My Bird Catalog
    • All Birds Catalog
    • American Flamingos
    • Bald Eagles
    • Barred Owls
    • Belted Kingfishers
    • Black-and-White Warblers
    • Eastern Bluebirds
    • Florida Scrub-Jays
    • Green Herons
    • Little Blue Herons
    • Northern Parulas
    • Ospreys
    • Reddish Egrets
    • Red-Shouldered Hawks
    • Roseate Spoonbills
    • Sandhill Cranes
    • Whooping Crane
  • Orlando TV News/History
    • Orlando TV Schedules
    • Florida TV History
  • About this Site
Roger Simmons
Roger Simmons

Birds, Words, Pics + TV

WOFL promises new $1.5M radar will be most powerful in state

Roger Simmons, August 5, 2009

guardianWOFL-Fox 35 is upping the ante in the area’s Doppler competition, announcing plans to build a $1.5 million Dual Polarization radar it says will be more powerful than all the other radars in the market combined.

The announcement of the new radar system — dubbed “Guardian” — was made during WOFL’s Fox at 5 newscast Wednesday evening. Ground breaking has already taken place for the new Fox 35 radar facility in Christmas, and the system should be operational in about 45 days, Chief Meteorologist Glenn Richards said.

What’s different about this Doppler? Find out after the jump

The Dual Polarization technology is what makes Guardian different. Where current Dopplers give an x-ray of severe weather, Richards said, the Dual Polarization is the equivalent of taking a CT scan or MRI of the storm. According to manufacturer Baron Services, “A Dual Polarization radar differs from standard radars by using two different pulses, vertical and horizontal. The radar sends beams in pulses, one in waves that move up and down and another wave that moves side to side, making detection of precipitation much easier and more precise.”

Richards said the dual pulses will allow the Fox 35 staff “to see more quickly and more clearly the rotational winds within a developing tornado.

Oh, and the new radar transmits with 1 million watts of power — more than the combined total of radars in Central Florida combined. Greater wattage, WOLF says, will give it the most powerful radar system in the state and allow it to cut through even the heaviest rain that can diminish the beams of lower-powered radars.

Fox-owned sister station KRIV in Houston was among the first in the nation to deploy the Dual Polarization technology, doing so in 2007.

Click here to see a video about Guardian Dual-Polarization Radar.

Click here to read more about the Dual-Polarization technology.

Share on Social Media
x facebook reddit email
Orlando TV Weather WOFL-35 WOFL-35

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Orlando TV

Orlando broadcasting pioneer Lee Colee Hamilton dies at 90

July 22, 2017

Orlando broadcasting pioneer Lee Colee Hamilton passed away earlier this month at age 90. She started at Orlando radio station WLOF  as an “office girl” and eventually became Florida’s first female broadcast salesperson. She eventually rose to general sales manager at WLOF Radio and WLOF-TV Channel 9, which she helped launch in 1958.

Read More

More layoffs at WMFE TV/radio

February 4, 2009

Public broadcaster WMFE is continuing to be hit hard by the economic downturn. According to the Orlando Sentinel, the local PBS/NPR station group laid off 28 percent of its staff —  15 employees — in its most recent cuts. This follows layoffs in October that cut 10 people from the stations’ staff….

Read More

Changes keep coming at Local 6

March 30, 2007

Lots of personnel moves happening at WKMG. First, morning anchor Jacquie Sosa — who was supposed to return from maternity leave on Monday — was told her contract had not been renewed. She’s not expected to appear on the air again at the station, according to an insider. Sosa’s original…

Read More

Latest Posts

  • Florida Snail Kites bouncing back but still in peril
  • Crested Caracara is a beautiful Florida ‘scavenger’
  • Late summer at Orlando Wetlands: Hot but rewarding
  • Finally meeting Mr. Snail Kite at Lake Toho
  • Adding 14 new birds to my catalog, plus some old faces in new places

Top Locations

Orlando Wetlands

Posts about visits to Orlando Wetlands


UCF Arboretum

Posts about visits to UCF Arboretum


Merritt Island

Posts about visits to Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge


Lake Apopka

Posts about visits to Lake Apopka Wildlife Drive


Fort DeSoto

Posts about visits to Fort DeSoto Park


Galleries

Roger's Favorites

An ever-changing collection of my favorite pictures


American Flamingos

Photos of American Flamingos in Indian River


Belted Kingfishers

Photos of Belted Kingfishers across Central Florida.


Oystercatchers

Pictures of American Oystercatchers at Fort DeSoto Park


Spoonbills

Pictures of Roseate Spoonbills in Central Florida


Whooping Crane

Pictures of one of the last Whooping Cranes in Florida


MORE GALLERIES


Topics

American Flamingo American Kestrel Anhinga Bald Eagles Barn Swallow Barred Owl Belted Kingfisher Black-and-White Warbler Black-Crowned Night-Heron Caspian Tern Common Gallinule Common Yellowthroat Digital TV Eastern Bluebird Great Blue Heron Great Egret Green Heron Limpkin Little Blue Heron Northern Cardinal Northern Parula Orlando Wetlands Park Osprey Palm Warbler Prairie Warbler Purple Gallinule Red-bellied Woodpecker Red-shouldered Hawk Red-Winged Blackbird Reddish Egret Roseate Spoonbills Sandhill Crane Savannah Sparrow Snowy Egret Tricolored Heron Tufted Titmouse WESH-2 WFTV-9 White Ibis WKCF-18 WKMG-6 WMFE-24 WOFL-35 Wood Stork WRDQ-27

©2025 Roger Simmons | All Rights Reserved