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  2. Air Defense Artillery Branch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_Defense_Artillery_Branch

    The Air Defense Artillery branch descended from Anti-Aircraft Artillery (part of the U.S. Army Coast Artillery Corps until 1950, then part of the Artillery Branch) into a separate branch on 20 June 1968. On 1 December 1968, the ADA branch was authorized to wear modified Artillery insignia, crossed field guns with missile.

  3. United States Army Field Manuals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army_Field...

    Army Publishing Directorate homepage at army.mil -Free Field Manuals and other publications in .pdf format. 500 Field Manuals online at SurvivaleBooks.com Archived 2022-06-10 at the Wayback Machine; Incomplete list of active field manuals at army.mil; Field Manuals online at globalsecurity.org Archived 2023-04-02 at the Wayback Machine

  4. United States Army air defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army_air_defense

    The Air Defense Artillery is the branch that specializes in anti-aircraft weapons (such as surface-to-air missiles). In the US Army, these groups are composed of mainly air defense systems such as the PATRIOT Missile System, Terminal High Altitude Air Defense, and the Avenger Air Defense system which fires the FIM-92 Stinger missile.

  5. Army Battle Command System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_Battle_Command_System

    The Global Command and Control System - Army provides a common picture of Army tactical operations to the Joint and Coalition community, and facilitates interoperability of systems across Army/Joint theaters, however no true synchronization occurs with PASS/DDS which introducing many issues on the battlefield for Soldiers, Marines, Sailors and ...

  6. M167 VADS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M167_VADS

    The two versions of the Vulcan Air-Defense System, the towed M167 and self-propelled M163 VADS, were developed by the United States Army Weapons Command at Rock Island Arsenal in 1964. They were accepted as a replacement for the M45 Quadmount in 1965, and first production M167s were delivered to the U.S. Army in 1967.

  7. 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]

  8. M163 VADS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M163_VADS

    The M163 Vulcan Air Defense System (VADS), officially Gun, Air Defense Artillery, Self-Propelled 20-mm, M163, is a self-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG) that was primarily used by the United States Army. The M163 provides mobile, short-range air defense protection for ground units against low-flying fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters.

  9. Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_Air_and_Missile...

    At the Army's Project Convergence 2021 tech demonstration and experimentation event, IBCS was used to pass information from ground, air, and space sensors to a fire control system. [50] IBCS passed sensor data from an F-35 to AFATDS (Army Field Artillery Tactical Data System), using the aircraft as a spotter for artillery fire.