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  2. Saugatuck Gap Filler Radar Annex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saugatuck_Gap_Filler_Radar...

    Like the other three gap-fillers under the control of Custer AFS, the Saugatuck Gap Filler Annex was designed to be unmanned and was operated remotely by the prime site. Also, like the other gap-fillers, the Saugatuck annex employed AN/FST-1 Coordinate Data Transmitter to send radar data to the immense AN/FSQ-7 computer housed at SAGE Direction ...

  3. WSR-74 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WSR-74

    The WSR-74 was introduced as a "gap filler", as well as an updated radar that, among other things, was transistor-based. [3] In the early 1970s, Enterprise Electronics Corporation (EEC), based out of Enterprise, Alabama won the contract to design, manufacture, test, and deliver the entire WSR-74 radar network (both C and S-Band versions).

  4. Brookfield Air Force Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brookfield_Air_Force_Station

    The P-62 site designation and the 662d Radar Squadron were transferred to Oakdale AFS, Pennsylvania, when radar operations ceased at Brookfield AFS on 1 Nov 1959 due to budget considerations. This site at Brookfield became a gap-filler radar site (RP-62E) for Oakdale. The Brookfield site operated as a gap-filler annex from Feb 1964 until June 1968.

  5. Category : Radar stations of the United States Air Force

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Radar_stations_of...

    Pages in category "Radar stations of the United States Air Force" The following 145 pages are in this category, out of 145 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .

  6. Permanent System radar stations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permanent_System_radar...

    Gap-filler and semi-mobile radar stations On 18 January 1952, ADC proposed the construction of small, unmanned stations with gap filler radars. [2]: 227 The USAF Directorate of Plans (War Plans Division) "prepared the proposal … to add 29 mobile and 135 low-altitude stations to ADC's radar system" for completion by the end of 1955.

  7. Niagara Falls Air Force Missile Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niagara_Falls_Air_Force...

    The missile site and squadron were activated on 1 June 1960, and missiles were operational on 1 December 1961. In January 1962 the RF-62E gap filler radar site at Brookfield Air Force Station in Ohio became a "major off-base…installation" of the Niagara Falls site, transferred from Wright-Patterson AFB. [2]

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  9. SAGE radar stations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAGE_radar_stations

    Post-World War II radar stations included those of the 1948 "five-station radar net" and the Lashup network completed in 1950, followed by the "Priority Permanent System" with the initial (priority) radar stations completed in 1952 [3]: 223 as a "manual air defense system" [4] with Manual ADCCs (e.g., using Plexiglas plotting boards as at the 1954 Ent Air Force Base command center for ADC.) [3 ...