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  2. 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.

  3. US Field artillery team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/US_Field_artillery_team

    The fire direction center (FDC) concept was developed at the Field Artillery School at Ft. Sill, Oklahoma, during the 1930s under the leadership of its Director of Gunnery, Carlos Brewer [4] and his instructors, who abandoned massing fire by a described terrain feature or grid coordinate reference. They introduced a firing chart, adopted the ...

  4. Ship gun fire-control system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_gun_fire-control_system

    Naval gun fire control potentially involves three levels of complexity: Local control originated with primitive gun installations aimed by the individual gun crews. The director system of fire control was incorporated first into battleship designs by the Royal Navy in 1912. All guns on a single ship were laid from a central position placed as ...

  5. Plotting room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plotting_room

    In this U.S. Army Coast Artillery Corps plotting room, the table is a Whistler-Hearn plotting board.Other devices for fire control are visible on the table. Cut-away view of a Royal Navy World War II K-class destroyer Director Control Tower (D.C.T.) with Type 285 radar; plotting room shown on lower level This massive concrete casemate housed the underground plotting room for the 12-inch ...

  6. United States Army Field Artillery School - Wikipedia

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

    Maj. Carlos Brewer, director of the Gunnery Department in the late 1920s and early 1930s, introduced new fire direction techniques so fire support would be more responsive. Maj. Orlando Ward, the next department director, developed the fire direction center to centralize command and control and to facilitate massing fire. Brewer, Ward, and Lt ...

  7. NORAD Control Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORAD_Control_Center

    Mill Valley Air Force Station was the San Francisco Defense Area NORAD Control Center after the "40th Artillery Brigade Air Defense Command Post" was established in September 1961 with a Martin AN/GSG-5 Battery Integration and Radar Display Equipment (BIRDIE) fire distribution center. [7] It maintained this mission until 1974.

  8. 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.

  9. FiReControl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FiReControl

    FiReControl was a project, initiated in the United Kingdom in March 2004, to reduce the number of control rooms used to handle emergency calls for fire services and authorities. Presently there are 46 control rooms in England that handle calls from the local public for emergency assistance via the 999 system.