Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/GL_Mk._I_radar> ?p ?o }
- GL_Mk._I_radar abstract "Gun Laying radar, Mark I, or GL Mk. I for short, was an early radar system developed by the British Army to provide range information to associated anti-aircraft artillery. There were two upgrades to the same basic system, GL/EF (Elevation Finder) and GL Mk. II, which added the ability to accurately determine bearing and elevation.The first GL set was a crude design developed during the 1930s. Based on Chain Home, GL used separate transmitters and receivers located in wooden cabins mounted on gun carriages, each with its own large antenna that had to be rotated to point at the target. The antenna produced a signal that was semi-directional and was only capable of providing accurate slant range information; it could not locate a target better than about 20 degrees in bearing, and did not provide elevation information at all. A number were deployed with the British Expeditionary Force and at least one was captured by German forces during the Dunkirk evacuation. Their evaluation led them to hold a low opinion of British radar systems.Plans to introduce the Mk. II with accurate bearing and elevation were underway from the start, but these would not be available until 1940. An expedient solution was the GL/EF attachment, providing bearing and elevation measurements accurate to about a degree. With these improvements, the number of rounds needed to destroy an aircraft fell to 4,100, a ten-fold improvement over early-war results. About 410 of the Mk. I and slightly modified Mk. I* units had been produced when production moved to the Mk. II, which had enough accuracy to directly guide the guns. Higher accuracy and simpler operation lowered the rounds-per-kill to only 2,750 with Mk. II. After the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, about 200 Mk. II units were supplied to the Soviets who used them under the name SON-2. 1,679 Mk. II's were ultimately produced.The introduction of the cavity magnetron in 1940 led to a new design effort using highly-directional parabolic antennas to allow both ranging and accurate bearing measurements while being much more compact. These GL Mk. III radar units were produced in the UK as the Mk. IIIB (for British), and a locally designed model from Canada as the Mk. IIIC. Both were generally replaced starting in 1944 by the superior SCR-584.".
- GL_Mk._I_radar thumbnail GL_Mk._II_radar_receiver.jpg?width=300.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=5269504.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink 39083472.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink books?id=9scQqYDtbhsC.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink books?id=B2z2ONO7nBQC.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink books?id=VD_b81J3yFoC.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink books?id=uYgsr3exvS4C.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink books?id=zXMSAQAAMAAJ.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink ji-3a-1.1946.0199;jsessionid=1ihpc31g1cgho.x-iet-live-01.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageExternalLink radar.htm.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageID "44378239".
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageLength "50636".
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageOutDegree "101".
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageRevisionID "702324671".
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink A.C._Cossor.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Air-to-Surface_Vessel_radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Air_Ministry.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Airborne_interception_radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Analog_computer.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Andrew_Huxley.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Antenna_(radio).
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Antenna_factor.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Anti-Aircraft_Command.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Anti-aircraft_warfare.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Ballistics.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Barrage_balloon.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Britain.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Bawdsey_Manor.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Bearing_(navigation).
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Bellini–Tosi_direction_finder.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Blue_Cedar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Breadboard.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink British_Army.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink British_Expeditionary_Force_(World_War_II).
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Capacitor.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gun_laying_radars.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Category:Military_radars_of_the_United_Kingdom.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Category:World_War_II_British_electronics.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Category:World_War_II_radars.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Cathode_ray_tube.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Cavity_magnetron.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Chain_Home.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Chicken_wire.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Coastal_artillery.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Conical_scanning.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink David_Keynes_Hill.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Dunkirk_evacuation.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Early-warning_radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Elevation.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink English_Channel.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink France.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_Alfred_Pile.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Freya_radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink GL_Mk._III_radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Gain_(electronics).
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Gramophone_Company.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Heavy_fighter.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Intermediate_frequency.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink J._A._Ratcliffe.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink LZ_130_Graf_Zeppelin_II.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Ladder.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Lobe_switching.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink London.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Low_frequency.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Luftwaffe.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Metropolitan-Vickers.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Microsecond.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Microwave.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink National_Grid_(Great_Britain).
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Night_bomber.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Operations_research.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Parabolic_reflector.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Patrick_Blackett.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Potentiometer.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Radar_display.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Radar_jamming_and_deception.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Radar_signal_characteristics.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Radio_frequency.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Rangefinder.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Air_Force.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Engineers.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Navy.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink SCR-584_radar.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Searchlight.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Shortwave_radio.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Signal-to-noise_ratio.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Signals_Research_and_Development_Establishment.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Slant_range.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink State_of_the_art.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Synchro.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink The_Blitz.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Time_base_generator.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Truss.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Vacuum_tube.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Very_high_frequency.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink Voltage.
- GL_Mk._I_radar wikiPageWikiLink W._A._S._Butement.