Author_Institution :
American Airlines, Inc., La Guardia Field, New York, N. Y.
fDate :
3/1/1948 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
SEVERAL AIR-LINE accidents during the winter of 1945–46 focused attention on the need for some means of electronically “seeing” obstacles and avoiding them. At this time there was no satisfactory air-borne radar. Working in close conjunction with an air-line industry electronics laboratory, air-line flight engineering personnel held conferences to decide what operating requirements were needed of an air-borne electronic device to provide simple and easily interpretable cockpit presentation of collision information. The standard polar-plotted information available in the APS-10 radar was selected. The narrow-beam scanning of the APS-4 was used to confine the energy to essentially a narrow horizontal slit in the plane of flight, spilling a minimum amount of energy downward.
Keywords :
Accidents; Airborne radar; Airplanes; Navigation; Safety; Storms;
Journal_Title :
Electrical Engineering
DOI :
10.1109/EE.1948.6444011