Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
German Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine Radar Equipment during World War II, relied on an increasingly diverse array of communications, IFF and RDF equipment for its function. Most of this equipment received the generic prefix FuG ( German : Funkgerät ), meaning "radio equipment".
This is an incomplete list of ground-based radars operated by the United States Marine Corps since the service first started utilizing radars in 1940. [1] The Marine Corps' has used ground-based radars for anti-aircraft artillery fire control, long range early warning, Ground-controlled interception (GCI), ground directed bombing, counter-battery radar, short-range cueing for man-portable air ...
It was placed into service in late 1942, and by 1944 it had also been adapted for use on surfaced submarines. With some 1,000 sets eventually being built, the Type 13 was by far the most used air- and surface-search radar of the Imperial Navy. The Type 14 was a shipboard system designed for long-range, air-search applications.
Air/Surface-search radar: Frequency: ... 90–180 m (98–197 yd) Power: 220 kW: SC was an American-made air and surface-search radar used during World War II by the ...
The SCR-584 (short for Set, Complete, Radio # 584) was an automatic-tracking microwave radar developed by the MIT Radiation Laboratory during World War II.It was one of the most advanced ground-based radars of its era, and became one of the primary gun laying radars used worldwide well into the 1950s.
centimetric airborne air-to-air radar derived from ASV operating at 3 cm wavelength at a frequency of 10 GHz. Used by 100 Group Mosquitos; FAA Fairey Firefly, postwar in the Sea Hornet N.F. Mark 21. ASV – Air to Surface Vessel radar. A 1.5 metre (200 MHz) VHF radar that could detect surfaced submarines at up to 36 miles.
The SCR-268 (for Signal Corps Radio no. 268) was the United States Army's first radar system. Introduced in 1940, it was developed to provide accurate aiming information for antiaircraft artillery and was also used for gun laying systems and directing searchlights against aircraft.
CDX radar - improvements and export to USSR (from 1943) Type 268 – 10 GHz submarine snorkel search radar (from 1944) MEW/AS - 2.8 GHz, 300 kW submarine detection radar (from 1943) MEW/HF - air search radar (from 1943) GL Mk. III(c) - microwave-frequency anti-aircraft gun-laying radar (from 1941)