Knowledge (XXG)

Tail warning radar

Source 📝

36: 227:'s radars; such systems do not provide range information but are still useful while not giving off any signals of their own. These systems also have the advantage of working against air and ground radars, which became important as the main anti-aircraft threat moved to 194:
night fighters to attract the German fighters, and when one was seen approaching the Mosquito would perform a controlled 360 degree turn that would result in the German aircraft in front of the Mosquito and centered in their radar. During the same time, the
223:, a long-range system that was used to help the electronics warfare officer properly time the use of jammers and chaff. Today, similar tasks are generally provided by passive receiver systems that listen for the signals from the 210:
Dedicated tail warning radars were used for a relatively short time, from late-WWII through the 1950s. After that time, the increasing speeds of aircraft and the ability to shoot from off-axis angles using
285: 53: 314: 119: 100: 72: 57: 79: 254: 86: 46: 268:. Systems like these were found on many post-war bomber designs and are generally regarded as a separate class. 338: 333: 187: 68: 228: 204: 191: 224: 179: 234:
A new class of tail warning radars emerged in the 1980s, primarily as a counter to SAM fire. The
212: 235: 93: 310: 265: 171: 258: 159: 261: 155: 327: 200: 175: 243: 163: 148: 17: 304: 239: 35: 203:
as an ad-hoc tail warning radar to provide some protection from these dreaded "
144:
systems used to provide warning of another aircraft approaching from the rear.
216: 167: 247: 220: 182:. These had to be withdrawn over Europe in 1944 when it was learned the 151: 166:
starting in June 1942. The set was also produced in the US as the
141: 29: 215:
eroded their usefulness. One of the last major uses was the
199:
began adding additional rearward-pointing antennas to their
140:
for short, was a short-lived class of aircraft-mounted
60:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 190:. A small number were then transferred to RAF 8: 309:. Chemical Publishing Company. p. 291. 186:was homing in on their signals using the 120:Learn how and when to remove this message 277: 246:B aircraft and saw action during the 7: 58:adding citations to reliable sources 264:bombers combined tail warning with 25: 170:, but used primarily on late-war 34: 45:needs additional citations for 27:Group of aircraft radar systems 1: 255:Automatic Gun Laying Turret 355: 306:Radar: The Electronic Eye 147:They were mostly used on 188:Flensburg radar detector 303:Rubin, Maurice (1963). 229:surface-to-air missiles 192:de Havilland Mosquito 225:interceptor aircraft 207:" intruder flights. 154:, starting with the 69:"Tail warning radar" 54:improve this article 213:air-to-air missiles 180:North American P-51 134:tail warning radar 18:Tail-warning radar 130: 129: 122: 104: 16:(Redirected from 346: 320: 290: 289: 282: 238:was used on the 172:fighter aircraft 125: 118: 114: 111: 105: 103: 62: 38: 30: 21: 354: 353: 349: 348: 347: 345: 344: 343: 339:Military radars 334:Aircraft radars 324: 323: 317: 302: 299: 294: 293: 284: 283: 279: 274: 259:Royal Air Force 160:Royal Air Force 126: 115: 109: 106: 63: 61: 51: 39: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 352: 350: 342: 341: 336: 326: 325: 322: 321: 315: 298: 295: 292: 291: 276: 275: 273: 270: 262:Avro Lancaster 219:system on the 201:night fighters 158:system fit to 128: 127: 110:September 2021 42: 40: 33: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 351: 340: 337: 335: 332: 331: 329: 318: 316:9780820600871 312: 308: 307: 301: 300: 296: 287: 281: 278: 271: 269: 267: 263: 260: 256: 251: 249: 245: 241: 237: 232: 230: 226: 222: 218: 214: 208: 206: 202: 198: 193: 189: 185: 181: 177: 176:Republic P-47 173: 169: 165: 164:heavy bombers 161: 157: 153: 150: 145: 143: 139: 135: 124: 121: 113: 102: 99: 95: 92: 88: 85: 81: 78: 74: 71: –  70: 66: 65:Find sources: 59: 55: 49: 48: 43:This article 41: 37: 32: 31: 19: 305: 297:Bibliography 286:"AN/ALQ-153" 280: 252: 244:Rockwell B-1 242:G and H and 233: 209: 196: 183: 149:World War II 146: 137: 136:, sometimes 133: 131: 116: 107: 97: 90: 83: 76: 64: 52:Please help 47:verification 44: 240:Boeing B-52 328:Categories 272:References 266:gun laying 236:AN/ALQ-153 80:newspapers 221:V bombers 217:Red Steer 197:Luftwaffe 184:Luftwaffe 174:like the 168:AN/APS-13 257:used on 248:Gulf War 231:(SAMs). 205:Serrate 152:bombers 94:scholar 313:  162:(RAF) 156:Monica 96:  89:  82:  75:  67:  142:radar 101:JSTOR 87:books 311:ISBN 253:The 178:and 73:news 56:by 330:: 250:. 138:TW 132:A 319:. 288:. 123:) 117:( 112:) 108:( 98:· 91:· 84:· 77:· 50:. 20:)

Index

Tail-warning radar

verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Tail warning radar"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message
radar
World War II
bombers
Monica
Royal Air Force
heavy bombers
AN/APS-13
fighter aircraft
Republic P-47
North American P-51
Flensburg radar detector
de Havilland Mosquito
night fighters
Serrate
air-to-air missiles
Red Steer
V bombers
interceptor aircraft

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.