Unit installation
TECHNICAL DESCRIPTION  INTRAC-305 
Page 54  INTRAC-305 MANUAL - Issue 3.2  © 2011 Advantech Wireless 
the raw satellite position estimate and the orbital model is 
filtered with another tracking filter (known as the "relationship 
algorithm") capable of tracking and correcting transients. This 
is then combined with the basic model to form a reliable 
predictor that tracks mean windage, refraction and 
stationkeeping manoeuvres without error. 
  The INTRAC tracking filters are designed in such a way as to 
enable the model to provide the required accurate pointing 
prediction at all times. Even when not verified by 
measurements, as for example occurs with loss of beacon, the 
tracking filters are capable of accurately predicting the satellite 
orbit for many days. Under INTRAC control, pointing is always 
controlled from the internal satellite orbit model. When a 
measurement cycle is performed it is always done as a 
perturbation with respect to current pointing. Thus, unlike 
conventional steptrack, INTRAC is always on track when a 
measurement cycle is performed. INTRAC never uses the 
measurement cycle for the purpose of directly bringing the 
beam on track. INTRAC simply performs one measurement 
cycle in each axis every 10 minutes in order to up-date the 
parameters used in the orbital model and for the rest of the 
time keeps the beam correctly pointed. 
  As a result of the combination of thermal noise, fade, 
scintillation, random windage-induced platform-reference 
motion and other noise sources the beacon signal will, during a 
measurement cycle, contain noise additional to that directly 
attributable to the measurement cycle itself. Careful algorithm 
design ensures that this noise has zero mean value and has a 
value of standard deviation such that it is equivalent to thermal 
noise of a certain effective value of C/No.  By special design of 
the measurement cycle the INTRAC system minimises this 
effective value of C/No in a way that is not possible with 
conventional steptrack methods. Furthermore the INTRAC 
measurement cycle design discriminates so effectively against 
the slow component of received beacon signal power 
fluctuation, caused for example by rain fades, that it almost 
completely suppresses errors caused by linear beacon ramps 
of all practicable slopes. 
  The INTRAC algorithm also incorporates adaptive 
compensation for imperfections in the antenna drives. As a 
result its performance is largely unaffected by servo backlash, 
AC track motor drive rate and transportation rate (motor to axis 
rate) and coast because of the specific choice of perturbation 
pattern and the use of high resolution position transducers. The 
INTRAC servo algorithm dynamically calibrates the mechanical 
coast of the antenna and automatically compensates for it if it 
is within reasonable limits (less than 1/20 beamwidth). 
  Wind affects tracking in two ways. The antenna structure is 
distorted by the wind load and this distortion shifts the beam 
pointing relative to the angle transducer reading. This 










