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238:, particularly in the Pacific Theater, with about 1000 units produced during the war, and remained in service for about 2 decades. Designed for installation on destroyers and larger ships to search for low-flying warplanes and surface ships, it achieved greatly improved surface coverage and detection of aircraft compared with previous lower frequency radars. It also proved a superior navigation aid, making possible the detection of buoys and shoreline at night or bad weather.
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249:: "A display" of return signal versus time, gyrocompass readout, and PPI (Plan Position Indicator) display
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Evolution of Naval Radio-electronics and
Contributions of the Naval Research Laboratory
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Radar
Origins Worldwide: History of Its Evolution in 13 Nations Through World War II
378:"US Radar: Operational Characteristics of Radar Classified by Tactical Application"
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197:) frequencies and the first surface-search radar to be equipped with a
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315:
A Radar
History of World War II: Technical and Military Imperatives
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201:(PPI), the ancestor of virtually all modern radar displays.
317:. Bristol and Philadelphia: Institute of Physics Publishing.
220:
technology developed in
Britain and brought to the US by the
245:
Operating console. The three large round displays are
179:. The first operational set was installed aboard the
35:(below and to the left of the SG) radar antennas of
189:in April 1942. It was the first Navy radar to use
393:
412:Military equipment introduced from 1940 to 1944
224:. The prototype was tested at sea aboard the
234:in May 1941. It saw extensive use during
289:. US Naval Research Laboratory. p. 187.
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175:for large warships developed during the
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417:Military radars of the United States
380:. Naval History and Heritage Command
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336:. London: Conway Maritime Press.
260:
31:SG (at the top of the mast) and
351:Watson, Raymond C. Jr. (2009).
306:
293:
63:
1:
16:American surface-search radar
7:
204:The radar was developed by
10:
433:
283:Gebhard, Louis A. (1979).
208:under the guidance of the
332:Friedman, Norman (1981).
214:Naval Research Laboratory
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210:MIT Radiation Laboratory
150:200 yd (180 m)
142:(28 km; 17 mi)
216:using the cutting-edge
199:plan position indicator
250:
47:Country of origin
313:Brown, Louis (1999).
244:
218:multicavity magnetron
173:surface-search radar
78:Surface-search radar
407:World War II radars
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251:
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362:978-1-4269-2111-7
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109:5.6° (horizontal)
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266:Friedman, p. 148
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177:Second World War
97:775, 800, or 825
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371:Further reading
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402:Naval radars
382:. Retrieved
355:. Trafford.
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307:Bibliography
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334:Naval Radar
236:World War 2
130:4, 8, or 12
396:Categories
384:2022-02-18
119:Pulsewidth
55:Introduced
229:USS
226:destroyer
195:microwave
184:USS
147:Precision
103:Beamwidth
84:Frequency
37:USS
206:Raytheon
166:SG radar
138:15
122:1.3–2 μs
20:SG radar
186:Augusta
170:US Navy
39:Astoria
359:
340:
321:
231:Semmes
191:S-band
168:was a
254:Notes
158:50 kW
155:Power
135:Range
87:3 GHz
66:built
357:ISBN
338:ISBN
319:ISBN
212:and
164:The
74:Type
58:1942
33:SK-1
140:nmi
127:RPM
93:PRF
69:955
64:No.
398::
271:^
387:.
365:.
346:.
327:.
193:(
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