Air Ministry Experimental Station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Ames (disambiguation).
AMES or Air Ministry Experimental Station was the way of identifying RAF radar types during and after World War II
- AMES Type 1, Chain Home (CH) - Early Warning
- AMES Type 2, Chain Home Low (CHL) - Early Warning, LOW altitude
- AMES Type 3, Type 1 and Type 2 operating in close proximity
- AMES Type 4, Overseas Chain Home, also known as Intermediate CO or CO/ICH
- AMES Type 5, Chain Overseas Low (COL)
- AMES Type 6, Light Warning Set
- AMES Type 7, Final static GCI station (Happidrome)
- AMES Type 8, Various marks of GCI radars, mobile and semi-static
- AMES Type 9, Mobile Chain Home
- AMES Type 10, Mobile Air Transportable System
- AMES Type 11, Mobile sets as possible standby should 1.5 m CHL/GCI be jammed
- AMES Type 12, Low Frequency transportable Chain Home Low.
- AMES Type 13, 10 cm "Nodding" Height Finder. Transmitter and Receiver of Naval Type 277
- AMES Type 14, 10 cm surveillance radar
- AMES Type 15, GCI radar, mobile version of Type 7
- AMES Type 16, Fighter Direction Station
- AMES Type 17, Fighter Direction (abandoned)
- AMES Type 18, CHL/GCI Modified Type 11 Mk2 (H) with height finding (abandoned)
- AMES Type 19, GCI Final Standby Type
- AMES Type 20, Decimetric Height Finder
- AMES Type 21, Tactical Control. Five vehicle GCI convoy
- AMES Type 22, GCI / COL (similar to AMES Type 11)
- AMES Type 23, LOMAN Overseas LORAN system
- AMES Type 24, Long range 10 cm Height Finder
- AMES Type 25, Experimental CHL
- AMES Type 26, GCI British version of American MEW (Microwave Early Warning)
- AMES Type 27, Air Transportable GCI
- AMES Type 28, CMH Air transportable Height Finder
- AMES Type 29, CHEL (Chain Home Extra Low) Air transportable (abandoned)
- AMES Type 30, CD (Coast Defence) / CHL (Admiralty only)
- AMES Type 31, CHEL CD in wooden hut
- AMES Type 32, CHEL CD - Nissen hut - none built
- AMES Type 33, CHEL CD - brick built
- AMES Type 34, CHEL CD 200 ft tower
- AMES Type 37, CHEL CD
- AMES Type 40, CD/CHL
- AMES Type 41, CHEL
- AMES Type 42, CHEL
- AMES Type 43, CHEL
- AMES Type 44, CHEL
- AMES Type 46, CHEL
- AMES Type 47, CHEL
- AMES Type 48, CHEL
- AMES Type 50, CHEL
- AMES Type 7000, Hyperbolic navigation system - GEE ground station
- AMES Type 9000, Transponder-based navigation system - Oboe ground station
[edit] Post War
- AMES Type 80, 2.850/3.050Ghz 1MW S-Band Early Warning radar - a.k.a. Green Garlic
- AMES Type 82, 3Ghz 3D Early Warning and tactical control radar for Bristol Bloodhound - a.k.a. Orange Yeoman
- AMES Type 83, 4Ghz/10Ghz mobile tactical control radar for Bristol Bloodhound 1 - a.k.a. Yellow River, Stingray
- AMES Type 85, 2.75/3.25GHz, 54MW - improved high-power version of AMES Type 82 - a.k.a. Blue Yeoman
- AMES Type 86, 10Ghz mobile CW target illuminator radar for Bristol Bloodhound 2 - a.k.a. Blue Anchor, Firelight
- AMES Type 87, 3Ghz 600Kw - balloon-borne Early Warning radar - a.k.a. Blue Joker
- AMES Type 88, 1.3Ghz/3Ghz Tactical Control/Surveillance radar - used in conjunction with AMES Type 89 - pair a.k.a. Green Ginger
- AMES Type 89, 3Ghz Tactical Control Height Finder - used in conjunction with AMES Type 88 - pair a.k.a. Green Ginger
[edit] References
- Bragg, Michael., RDF1 The Location of Aircraft by Radio Methods 1935-1945, Hawkhead Publishing, Paisley 1988 ISBN 0-9531544-0-8 The history of ground radar in the UK during WWII
- Latham, Colin & Stobbs, Anne., Radar A Wartime Miracle, Sutton Publishing Ltd, Stroud 1996 ISBN 0-7509-1643-5 A history of radar in the UK during WWII told by the men and women who worked on it.
- Radar Types