Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Remote Radar Head Trimingham or RRH Trimingham is a former TPS-77 radar station situated on the coast in the English county of Norfolk. [1] The site is located on the coast road between Cromer and Mundesley, 1 kilometre east of the village of Trimingham but the activity has now moved to RRH Neatishead due to the threat from coastal erosion.
RAF Trimingham Trimingham Beach. At Trimingham was an air defence radar station RAF Trimingham, a satellite station of RAF Neatishead inland, which had a structure shaped like a giant golf ball and was on the edge of the cliff on the coastal road.This structure was removed in early 2023.
Radar stations of the United States Air Force (7 C, 145 P) ... RRH Trimingham; U. United States general surveillance radar stations; W. White Sands Launch Complex 37
His wife told the station that he arrived in the U.S. in 2022 with his wife and three children under a work permit while awaiting a pending asylum case, and that permit was valid for four more years.
The station subsequently went on 24-hour watch from early 1939 and was put on a war footing on 24 August 1939 in preparation for war. On 12 August 1940, four Chain Home stations were targeted for bombing by the Luftwaffe, including RAF Ventnor. The radar station suffered considerable damage with most of the buildings being damaged or destroyed.
Remote Radar Head Neatishead (/ ˈ n iː t ɪ s h ɛ d / NEE-tis-hed), [3] and commonly abbreviated RRH Neatishead, is an air defence radar site operated by the Royal Air Force (RAF). It is located approximately 11 kilometres (6.8 miles) north-east of Norwich in the county of Norfolk , England.
The former Northeast Cape Air Force Station on St. Lawrence Island. The remains of the station were demolished in 2003. This is a list of White Alice Communications System sites. The White Alice Communications System (WACS) was a United States Air Force telecommunication link system constructed in Alaska during the Cold War.
An illustration of Oboe. Two radar stations track the flight of the aircraft. The southern station is the Cat which generates pulses whose arc is defined by the distance from the station to the target. The aircraft will fly along the arc from a start point ten minutes flight from the target.