Hi Mark:
I have a list of Radar Warning Receiver references that are very
close to this at:
https://prc68.com/I/RWR.shtml#References
The references on the China Lake Patents web page is more missile
related:
https://prc68.com/I/ChinaLakePatents.html#References
--
Have Fun,
Brooke Clarke
https://www.PRC68.com
axioms:
1. The extent to which you can fix or improve something will be limited by how well you understand how it works.
2. Everybody, with no exceptions, holds false beliefs.
-------- Original Message --------
Date: Wed, 28 Sep 2022 21:41:14 -0400
From: Mark K3MSB <[email protected]>
To: List Milsurplus <[email protected]>, ARC5
<[email protected]>
Subject: [Milsurplus] Books Recommendations
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<CABdVoaBjizxZiu+3Nx1aKZfXmUoM_V0UzC6G1kUuL-9v9OJX=w@mail.gmail.com>
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Over the past few months I've read two superb books on British and German
Electronic Warfare and Radar in WW II.
"Instruments of Darkness - The History of Electronic Warfare 1939-1945" by
Alfred Price
This book goes into significant details of the British and German systems.
"Instruments of Darkness" references another book....
"Most Secret War - British Scientific Intelligence 1939-1945" by R. V.
Jones.
Dr. Jones was the Assistant Director of Scientific Intelligence in Britain
during WW II. This 550 page tome is absolutely fascinating. While doing
an excellent job of discussing the British and German systems, it also
presents the continuous flow and dynamics of how the British and German
systems evolved to counter each other as the war progressed. It also
provides a lot of ancillary information of why things were done the way
they were done from a first hand perspective. Lots of maps and diagrams
too.....
Both available from Amazon.
73 Mark K3MSB