The second/third generation (depending if you count the MIG-23MF for instance as second generation?) MiG-23ML Flogger-G has a Sapfir-23ML radar with NATO code name High Lark, not the older Jay Bird (RP-22) radar.
The Jay Bird (RP-22SM) was used in the vastly inferior MiG-23MS Flogger-E, the export version of the MiG-23M Flogger-B, as well as the MiG-21SM and MiG-21bis variants.
Tom Cooper’s “MiG-23 Flogger in the Middle East” (ISBN 978-1-1912390-32-8 ) describes the maximum detection range of the RP-22SM in the MiG-23MS as 9.8 nm , with a tracking range of 6 nm. (page 8 ).
The MiG-23ML in Falcon BMS uses the N003 Sapfir-23ML (High Lark) radar, with a maximum detection range of 35 nm, according to Tom Cooper’s “MiG-23 Flogger in the Middle East” (page 33)
The Sapfir-23ML is described as Pulse Doppler radar and the maximum detection range is also given as 35 nm in Alexander Mladenov’s “Soviet Cold War Fighters” (ISBN 978-1781554968 ) - further specifying that this maximum range is in look-up mode only, whereas the maximum look-down range is 11 nm.
Also the MiG-23ML used the R-24R/T (AA-7C Apex) which had replaced the older R-23R/T but it doesn’t seem we have this Apex variant in BMS at this stage?
(The R-24R/T was not compatible with older Floggers, such as the MiG-23MS though the Iraqi Air Force rewired their older MiG-23MF Floggers and fitted APU-23M1E launch rails from their MiG-23MLs to enable their MIG-23MF fleet to also use the superior R-24R/T (AA-7C) missiles in combat against the Iranians as of 1984 onwards.)