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Bushnell Corporation is an American firm that specializes in sporting optics and outdoor products. It is based in Overland Park, Kansas and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Vista Outdoor . Bushnell makes binoculars , telescopes , spotting scopes , riflescopes , red dot sights , GPS devices , laser rangefinders , game cameras , night-vision ...
AN/CPS-4 Radar; AN/FPS-4 radar; AN/FPS-5 Radar; AN/FPS-6 Radar; AN/FPS-7 Radar; AN/FPS-14 Radar; AN/FPS-16 Instrumentation Radar; AN/FPS-17; AN/FPS-18 Radar; AN/FPS-19; AN/FPS-20 Early Warning Radar; AN/FPS-23; AN/FPS-24 radar; AN/FPS-26 Radar; AN/FPS-27; AN/FPS-30; AN/FPS-35; AN/FPS-85; AN/FPS-90; AN/FPS-95; AN/FPS-107; AN/FPS-108; AN/FPS-115 ...
Radars used for gun laying. ... SCR-268 radar; SCR-584 radar; SCR-784 Radar; Super Fledermaus; W. Western Electric M-33 Antiaircraft Fire Control System; Würzburg radar
Square Pair – fire control radar of the SA-5 system; Square Tie – surface search radar for small combatants and cruise missile target designation. [1] Chinese type 352. [2] Squat Eye – alternate target acquisition radar of the SA-3 system; Steel Yard – The Duga over-the-horizon radar; Straight Flush – fire control radar of the SA-6 system
The small black patch on the nose of this North American F-86 Sabre is the fibreglass cover over the small AN/APG-30 radar that fed the A-4 radar gunsight. A radar gunsight is a type of gunsight for aerial combat that combines a gyro gunsight with a small radar. They were introduced just after World War II and used into the 1960s.
The Automatic Gun-Laying Turret (AGLT), also known as the Frazer-Nash FN121, was a radar-directed, rear gun turret fitted to some British bombers from 1944. AGLT incorporated both a low-power tail warning radar and fire-control system , which could detect approaching enemy fighters , aim and automatically trigger machine guns – in total ...
Radar, Anti-Aircraft Number 3 Mark 7, also widely referred to by its development rainbow code Blue Cedar, was a mobile anti-aircraft gun laying radar designed by British Thomson-Houston (BTH) in the mid-1940s.
The antenna of Type 348 radar differs from both Type 347 and Type 349 radars in that most of the cone is missing, only the base remains, so the antenna of Type 348 radar has a very large circular flat surface, resulting in Type 348 radar resembles a scaled down version of another larger fire control radar for larger caliber guns (76 mm or ...