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  2. Mark I Fire Control Computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_I_Fire_Control_Computer

    Mark 1A Computer Mk 37 Director above the bridge of destroyer USS Cassin Young with AN/SPG-25 radar antenna. The Mark 1, and later the Mark 1A, Fire Control Computer was a component of the Mark 37 Gun Fire Control System deployed by the United States Navy during World War II and up to 1991 and possibly later.

  3. Gun data computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_data_computer

    The AFATDS is the "Fires XXI" computer system for both tactical and technical fire control. It replaced both BCS (for technical fire solutions) and IFSAS/L-TACFIRE (for tactical fire control) systems in U.S. Field Artillery organizations, as well as in maneuver fire support elements at the battalion level and higher.

  4. Western Electric M-33 Antiaircraft Fire Control System

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Electric_M-33...

    In 1944, the US Army contracted [7] for an electronic "computer with guns, a tracking radar, plotting boards and communications equipment" (M33C & M33D models used different subassemblies for 90 & 120 mm gun/ammunition ballistics.) [3] The "trial model predecessor" (T-33) was used as late as 1953, [8] and the production M33 (each $383,000 in 1954 dollars) [9] had been deployed in 1950. [10]

  5. Tachymetric anti-aircraft fire control system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachymetric_anti-aircraft...

    An alternative, non-tachometric, gonometric [3] [4] method of AA prediction is for specially trained observers to estimate the course and speed of the target manually and feed these estimates, along with the measured bearing and range data, into the AA fire control computer which then generates change of bearing rate and change of range data ...

  6. Mark 8 Fire Control Computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_8_Fire_Control_Computer

    The Mk 8 computer used all electric methods of computation, in contrast to the Mk 1, which performed most computations via mechanical devices. The Mk 8 was found to be more accurate than the Mk 1 and substantially faster in reaching a fire control solution, [ 2 ] but by the time it was developed and tested in 1944, supplies of the Mk 1 were ...

  7. Fire-control system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire-control_system

    A German anti-aircraft 88 mm Flak gun with its fire-control computer from World War II. Displayed in the Canadian War Museum.. A fire-control system (FCS) is a number of components working together, usually a gun data computer, a director and radar, which is designed to assist a ranged weapon system to target, track, and hit a target.

  8. Mark 56 Gun Fire Control System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Mark_56_Gun_Fire_Control_System

    The Type 904 radar tracker was also developed as a derivative of the GWS.22 Seacat air defense missile system. [4] In addition, the Mk.64 GUNAR, which changed the shooting command radar to the gun side equipment (initially the same AN/SPG-34 as the Mk.63, later AN/SPG-48), was also developed, and this was mainly used by the Royal Canadian Navy.

  9. M9 gun director - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M9_Gun_Director

    This computer continuously calculated trigonometric firing solutions for anti-aircraft weapons against enemy aircraft. When cued by the SCR-584 centimetric gun-laying radar and used in concert with anti-aircraft guns firing shells with proximity fuzes, it helped form the most effective anti-aircraft weapon system utilized by the Allies during ...