It won’t reliably jam a drone flying much above 150 meters at the full 2.5km range—terrain and altitude matter more than the spec sheet suggests, basically.
What it does is cover a full circle continuously, scanning at 60 degrees per second, and can track up to 50 targets at once on that 24GHz FMCW radar, which is pretty much what you need for a perimeter defense that doesn’t leave blind spots.

The vertical coverage runs form -15° to +45°, so low-flying threats near ground level or birds aren’t going to trigger false alarms as often as wider-field systems, and we’ve seen it handle -20°C to +70°C without hiccups.

5 frequency bands (430-440MHz, 900-930MHz, 2.4-2.5GHz, 5.7-5.9GHz, plus GPS) are covered—you usually get the jammer paired to your specific drone threats, but verify which bands your region needs because RoHS governs waste compliance, not performence.

Packaing is a single 20kg unit, 800mm diameter by 1000mm tall, IP65 rated, with a Windows-based display and RS485 or Ethernet hookup—most buyers go with teh 10/100 Ethernet for quick integration, and you’ll need to source your own mount stand.
Order lead time is roughly 2-4 weeks for a single TXPD3000 (we usually have stock, but confirm), and MOQ is one—COA and CE paperwork come with it, but don’t expect on-site training unless you pay extra.
It can track up to 50 simultaneous targets in real time, thanks to its 24GHz FMCW radar.
Detection range is up to 5km, and jamming reaches 2.5km at a drone altitude of 150m.
Yes, it's certified with CE, ISO, FCC, and RoHS, so it meets international quality and safety standards.
The unit is 800mm in diameter and 1000mm tall, weighing 20kg, making it relatively compact for a 360° radar system.
Yes, it's rated for -20°C to +70°C and has an IP65 rating, so it's built for outdoor use in tough conditions.