The radars in use on JAPANESE ships were all of conventional design and mediocre construction. Only three radar models were in use on surface ships and submarines at the end of the war. A modified version of the Mark 2 Model 2 radar was used for fire control as well as surface search.
The radars in use on JAPANESE ships were all of conventional design and mediocre construction. Only three radar models were in use on surface ships and submarines at the end of the war. A modified version of the Mark 2 Model 2 radar was used for fire control as well as surface search.
The radars in use on JAPANESE ships were all of conventional design and mediocre construction. Only three radar models were in use on surface ships and submarines at the end of the war. A modified version of the Mark 2 Model 2 radar was used for fire control as well as surface search.
B-29 “Double Trouble” Is “Mister Bee”: Radar Photography of and Bombing Japan During World War II My North Carolinian Father in the Crew of the "Lone B-29" Boeing Superfortress Bomber Flying the Longest Nonstop Combat Mission of World War II
Operations of G Company, 379th Infantry Regiment, 95th Infantry Division, in Breaching The Maginot Line in The Vicinity of Fort Jeanne D'Arc, 14-15 November, 1944 (Rhineland Campaign)