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German early warning Ground Radar
"SECRET A. D. I. (K) Report No. 390/1945
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W AS THE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED UNTIL COMMENTED ON AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. RADIO AND RADAR EQUIPMENT IN THE LUFTWAFFE – X. German early warning Ground Radar. 1. This report is the tenth of the series dealing with radio and radar equipment in the Luftwaffe. As in the case of the previous nine reports (A.D.I.(K) 343, 357, 362, 365, 369, 370 and 330/1945), it is based on interrogation of General Nachrichtenführer MARTINI, Director General of Signals, and some members of his staff, and has been supported by a number of relevant documents of recent date which were in the possession of the General's Chief of Staff. DEVELOPMENT OF EARLY-WARNING RADAR. Early History. 2. As recounted in A.D.I.(K) 343/1945 and again mentioned in A.D.I.(K) 365/1945, the Freya, which became the first standard early-warning radar set for the G.A.F., was developed by the firm of Gema, Berlin, with the encouragement of the Navy. The first Freyas were in operation as naval coast watchers in 1938 at a time when the G.A.F. was only thinking of radar in terms of searchlights and Flak. 3. The Technisches Amt wished to push 50 cm. wavelength like that of Würzburg, but the Navy backed the longer wavelength of Freya, and General MARTINI, who immediately appreciated the advantage of a wide-angle apparatus of Freya type to early warning, asked that a number of Freyas should be allocated to the G.A.F. 4. In early 1939 one of the present P/W, Oberst Ing. HENTZ was selected from among the Köthen staff to take charge of the first experimental Freya used by the G.A.F. in that year. It was thought at first that the Freya would only give indications over the sea, but during the march on Prague in the first part of 1939 an experimental Freya was set up in the Riesen Gebirge in order to watch Czech aircraft which might react to the German advance. This experiment was not a success, as the signals operators had not been expecting to find their tube cluttered up with permanent echoes. 5. At the outbreak of war the G.A.F. possessed eight Freya stations distributed round the East and North Frisian islands guarding the Heligoland Bight and the approaches to the North Sea ports. These Freyas proved their value during the early Bomber Command raids on Cuxhaven and Wilhelmshaven etc., when some outstanding successes were registered by German fighters, which were vectored on to the bomber formation as a result of the early-warning obtained by the Freyas. It was this success which convinced the G.A.F. of the practicability of radar as an early-warning device. Early Developments. 6. The range of the early Freya was of the order of 80 km and their accuracy of the order of a few degrees. No height finding facilities were available. The height finding problem at close range was solved by directing a Würzburg on to the target when it came within the range of the latter, which in these days was about 30 km. This system of height measurement continued to be the only practical one for a long period, although the field operators had put in requirements for height finding Freya apparatus as early as 1940. 7. Experiments by the G.A.F. produced the Wassermann, but the German Navy experimented with the object of introducing height finding facilities in the Freyas, and the N.V.K. at Pelzerhaken produced the "Chinese" and "Tiefland". The former gave maximum location by means of a compensator in an serial system inclined at 45° and was used for angles greater than 15°, whilst the latter was intended for angles less than 15°. The combination of the two mounted on the Freya was known as the “Malaya”. 8. Measurement of height with the Tiefland was possible between 2° and about 15° over level terrain; measurement of angles of less than 5° was, however, very inaccurate and range was actually less than that of the Würzburg-Riese. Over uneven terrain, measurement of the vertical angle was impossible. 9. The Tiefland had the disadvantage of being complicated in operation - a large field of reflector nets was also necessary - in addition to which it gave no better performance than the Würzburg-Riese. Its use would only have been justified had it been a device which could be moved easily and quickly and had there not been restrictions on the selection of suitable sites for its mounting. 10. Freya Fahrstuhl was designed by Köthen as early as 1943 but was never put into large-scale production, and was not satisfactory. This apparatus depended on the difference of phase observed between direct ray and ground reflection to give height. 11. Finally, in 1944 methods or swinging the beam electrically were used in the Wassermann for height measurement, but the Würzburg remained the basic means of measuring the elevation up to the end of the war. The D/F accuracy of the Freya was greatly improved when the split beam or A.N. technique was introduced in 1942, end this made Freya valuable for fighter control on the Egon system. 12. The range of Freya, naturally dependent on height of an objective, was about 150 km. but this was not considered sufficient for the early-warning service and efforts were made in 1942 to produce early-warning apparatus with greater range. The first of these was the Wassermann which improved the early-warning range to about 200-250 km, while the Mammut, used by the Navy for coast watcher purposes, was also used by the G.A.F. and gave ranges up to about 300 km. Finally Elefant, which gave ranges up to 350 km., was built and came into operation in about 1944. 13. By the middle of 1943 an elaborate early-warning service covering the whole of Germany and composed of sites with both Freyas, Würzburgs and Giant Würzburgs had been built up, and a number of Wassermann chimneys were in operation along the coast of Europe. 14. The great improvement in D/F accuracy resulting from the split beam technique was utilised by KAMMHUBER to develop his box system of night fighting, and in fact at this time it was strictly forbidden for a night fighter to fly any form of night defence other than the close control of the KAMMHUBER box system. 15. Other methods of fighter control namely the Egon and Bonito, were under development, and of these the former also used the Freya wavelength for range and D/F. Effect of first use of Window. 16. When Window was first used in July 1943 the whole of the early-warning system as well as the night fighter control system broke down completely. 17. The first German reaction to the use of Window was to attempt to filter it out or obtain some method of distinguishing between blips due to window and those due to the aircraft itself. Virtually no work had been done on this problem before July 1943 because GOERING had been so frightened by the prospect of Window being used by the enemy that the theoretical possibilities had been hushed up and scientists has not being allowed to work on the problem (cf. A.D.I.(K) 334/1945). 13. Nevertheless, when Window was first used by the Allies, it was only a matter of some ten days before the first solution to the Window problem for the Würzburg was forthcoming in the shape of the Würzlaus, which relied on the Doppler effect. High priority was given to the problem and even money prizes were offered for solutions. 19. Three main types of equipment were evolved as a result of the various solutions proposed; one was Taunus, which gave greater blip resolution, another was the propeller modulation type such as Nürnberg and the third was based on the Doppler effect, the latter being termed Laus A—J devices. Of these the Freyalaus for Freya and Wasserfloh for the Wassermann were not used operationally till 1944. Effect of Further Countermeasures. 20. As Allied countermeasures became more intense and electronic jamming was also used, the signals staff decided that it should be the genera1 policy to provide all types of radar with the facility for a change of frequency. The first efforts to do this were brought about by mechanical trombone tuning of the aerials so that two or three neighbouring wavelengths could be used. This was termed the WISMAR principle. 21. Sometime in 1943 Dr. SCHULTER of the firm Siemens developed the Breitband (wide band) aerial which enabled a much greater frequency spread to be used. This principle was termed Voll Wismar and with increasing experience was to be applied to all types of ground radar. At the same time Freya and Würzburg were allotted different "Inseln" or frequency bands in the hope that some of these bands would not be jammed locally. This policy was carried to great lengths, but Allied countermeasures still remained extremely effective. 22. Either owing to the weakness of German centimetre technique, or to a lack of appreciation of the value of centimetre wavelengths, the main trend in avoiding British countermeasures was towards longer wavelengths, and special Köthen Freyas using wavelengths of 5 and 8 metres were prepared. When jamming on the more normal wavelengths became severe these reserve sets were operated for a minimum period often only a few seconds, in order not to compromise the wavelength, and an effort was made to obtain a clear picture of the air situation with their aid. 23. Eventually wavelengths up to 13 metres came into use for early-warning with giant sets such as Elefant. British Transmissions as an Aid to Early Warning. 24. Despite all these precautions, and despite the fact that P/W claimed that many of these wavelengths were not effectively jammed, it frequently happened that the earlywarning service was unable to obtain a clear picture of the situation and recourse had to be made to indirect means. The monitoring service was of particular value in this respect, and they successfully maintained their point of view that it was not worthwhile jamming the fighter R/T because D/F’ing of this provided excellent early warning. 25. The fact that British night bomber crews were in the habit of using Monica and H2S from the very beginning of their flights was also of great assistance in supplementing the early-warning picture. In the same way Allied I.F.F. was of great value, and special Freyas known as Freya Flamme which covered the I.F.F. frequency band were erected on some important early-warning sites. 26. Finally, an ingenious system which was invented by Oberst Postrat SCHOLZ called Klein Heidelberg utilised the reflection of the transmissions from British C.H. stations and was regarded as virtually unjammable. Development of Panoramic Presentation. 27. As early as 1940 a requirement was put up for a panoramic presentation for early-warning radar, but no great progress seems to have been made until the discovery that H2S was using a P.P.I. successfully. Difficulties were encountered with the early types such as Propeller developed by Lorenz and it was not until early 1944 that the Jagdschloss sets came into existence. These were originally used entirely for early warning and not with the idea that night-fighter aircraft could be controlled with their aid. It was not until 1945, when the value of Jagdschloss was fully appreciated and it was numerous enough to cover 1st class radar sites throughout Germany that some efforts were made in its employment for control of night fighters. 28. With the intended introduction of Neuling I.F.F., which could distinguish not only between friend and foe but between individual crews as described in A.D.I.(K) 365/1945, fighter control from panoramic presentation was to be greatly extended. SPECIAL PROBLEMS AND APPLICATIONS ON GROUND RADAR. Day Fighter Control. 29. The necessity for day-fighter control from ground radar stations was early appreciated by the Signals staff, and the Battle of Britain proved to them how successfully it could be used by air force inferior in numbers. Spasmodic attempts were made to introduce it into the G.A.F. but the German fighter tradition was too strong, and the pilots would not accept ground control. 30. It was not until 1943 that close ground control on the Egon system using the FuGe 25A in the aircraft was introduced. Control of Night Fighters. 31. With KAMMHUBER’s box system two Würzburg sets were used - one to follow the target and one to follow the fighter, the positions of each being projected on to the map by means of the so-called Seeburg Tisch. So long as there was no jamming of ground radar, this method was successful and could place a fighter within 200-400 metres of the target. Later the Würzburg Riese was used and the majority of these sets were allocated for this purpose. 32. A suggestion had been made that the Würzburg 50 cm. transmission should be used simultaneously for giving the fighter his vectors and a system named Sprechstange was experimented with. It was rapidly found that, if the operator failed to hold the fighter in the beam, the pilot received no instructions from the ground, and so vital instructions might not be heard. For this reason it was soon abandoned as not practicable. I.F.F. Problems. 33. The FuGe 25A was originally designed by the firm of Gema for use with the first Freyas operating on 2.4 metres. As recounted in A.D.I.(K). 365/1945 it became the standard German airborne I.F.F. set in 1942 and was used with the Kuh transmitter and Gemse receiver on all ground radar installations, whatever the wavelength, with the exception of the Würzburg series. A full description of the problems of ground radar has been given in the above-mentioned report. Plotting of High Flying Aircraft. 34. In 1944 it was found that the very high level Mosquito bomber attacks on the Reich sometimes crossed the coast unplotted, and at best were only detected intermittently after passing the coastal screen of Wassermanns which could swing their beams upward electrically. The reason for this was that the main lobs of Freya only went up to about 8,000 metres. There were two subsidiary lobes, the higher of which reached to 12,000 metres, but the latter only gave limited coverage at this height over an estimated range of 70 km. 35. The Würzburg beam was too narrow and did not give general coverage, while Freya Fahrstuhl, which could also be utilised for aircraft flying at great height, had hardly been introduced into operations. For this reason considerable use was made of the Würzburg Riese-G which was a Giant Würzburg with a very narrow 50 cm. beam, with additional Freya aerials on 2 metres, set in the paraboloid, giving a wide beam coverage as well. As the circle paraboloid could be tilted upwards, excellent high coverage was obtained and high fliers were plotted with its aid. Plotting of Low-Flying Aircraft. 36. The Germans were fully aware of lack of low cover, which enabled aircraft flying low over the sea to cross the coast unnoticed. A number of experiments were conducted to overcome this disadvantage by placing special aerial arrays at considerable height above the ground as for instance in the case of the Würzmann using the Würzburg frequency and the Tiefentwiel using the Hohentwiel A.S.V. frequency. 37. Some experiments were also conducted with wavelengths of about 20 metres with the idea, it was believed, of making use of the curved path which those waves followed. The experiments were never completed, as this band was interfered with by communications signals transmitted on the same wavelength. 38. Experiments had also been made at Köthen with Taunus equipment coupled to the Freya to obtain extremely high resolution. A Fieseler Storch aircraft was used, flying at 150 metres over flat country, and under these conditions the aircraft could just be seen at ranges of 4 or 5 km. through the ground returns due to woods and houses. It was concluded, however, that this range was so small that no advantage was to be gained. GROUND RADAR INSTALLATIONS. Freya. 39. Freya was manufactured by the firm of Gema, Berlin, which, at the outbreak of war, was only a small establishment largely financed by the Navy. Members of the Technisches Amt, as well as of MARTINI’s staff, criticised the firm, severely, saying that they lacked experience of manufacturing and were unwilling to make themselves adaptable. They described the Freya Stand for instance as a “cast iron monstrosity”, which they felt could easily have been made very much lighter in weight and manufactured more simply. 40. Despite this complaint against Gema, it was a principle that all ground radar apparatus should be of fairly simple construction so that it could be made mobile. A few days after the invasion of Norway the Germans were experiencing considerable trouble from bomber raids in the Stavanger area and an urgent request was sent out from there for a Freya to be supplied. This job was given to one of the present P/W, and within three days of receiving it a Freya LZ Stand had been dismantled and packed into three Ju.52's and transported to Stavanger. Eight days after the reception of the order the Freya was operating. 41. At the beginning of the war the G.A.F. possessed eight Freyas. At the end of the war over 1,200 had been manufactured and a document dated 1st January 1945 states that 671 were in operation at that time. 42. Owing to the incidence of all forms of Allied jamming, the original wavelength of 2.40 metres had been modified very considerably. The following impressive list of wavelengths current at the beginning of November 1944 was found among documents brought by General MERTINI’s staff:- M. M. Insel A Insel B Insel C Insel D Band Z - 2,32-2,45 - 2,08-2,24 - 3,00-3,30 - 1,50-1,55 Köthenband gelb/braun Köthenband gelb/rot Köthenband Ludwig Köthenband gelb 1,70 1,80 1,95 2,00 Y X W V U T Vollwismar Bereich I II III - 1,55-1,60 - 1,60-1,65 - 1,65-1,70 - 1,70-1,75 - 1,75-1,80 - 1,80-1,85 - 1,90-2,50 - 1,20-1,90 - 2,50-4,00 Köthenband gelb/grün Köthenband grün Köthenband rot Köthenband braun Köthenband weiss Köthenband schwarz Köthenband blau Köthenband violett Köthenband grau Köthenband blau neu 2,56 3,15 3,40 3,65 4,05 4,60 4,80 5,20 5,75 8,80 43. In addition to this formidable list P/W states that in early 1945 experiments were being made with a Köthen Freya on about 12 metres. The Köthen Freya with wavelengths of over 4 metres presented a problem to the aerial experts which was being solved by using Yagi aerials mounted above the normal aerial mattress. Although it was considered desirable to mount the aerials at a height above the ground of at least ten times the wavelength, this was not always possible; for instance the Yagi aerial of Köthen Blau (4.80 metres) was, according to a document, to be mounted 30 metres above the ground. 44. Two further new wavelengths known as the Rotschwarz and Grünschwarz were planned and were to operate on two of the frequencies used by British Gee in the hope that they would not be jammed. It was realized that these wavelengths could only be used when the jamming of Gee by Heinrich transmitters was not being carried out. The Freyas so equipped were to be located as far as possible from the positions of the Heinrich jamming transmitters. 45. In order that these longer wavelengths should not be compromised, a so-called Kurz Zeit apparatus was built into the Freyas which allowed transmission of only ten impulses and prevented more impulses being emitted for a period which could be set between 2 and 22 seconds. It was considered unlikely that listening aircraft would be able to tune to these short interrupted pulses. 46. A document, dated June 1944, in the possession of a member of General MARTINI's staff, contains a short history of the jamming experienced by Freya. Extracts from this document are given below in free translation: "Jamming by Jamming Transmitters. "In April 1942 the jamming of Freya on the original 2.40 metre wavelength was reported. "On 5th March 1942 the Chef N.V.W. put up a requirement to the Technisches Amt asking that alternative frequencies for Freya should be made available, basing his request on the fact that parts of a Würzburg, from which the exact wavelength could be determined, had fallen into enemy hands during the Cap d'Antifer (Bruneval) raid on 27th February 1942. By the end of 1942 the original Freya wavelength was being jammed generally. "As no steps to provide alternative frequencies in operations had at that time been taken by the Technisches Amt or by industry, Ln. Versuchs Regiment Köthen was asked to use its resources to provide them. "After about one month, on 15th June 1945, the first Freya which operated in an unjammed band, the Köthen Grün, was handed over to a unit for operational use. "In 1942, Freya on Insel B and Insel C had been demanded from the industry but they were not delivered until 1943. The Insel B sets were first available on 23rd February 1943, but shortly after being used operationally were jammed by the Allies. The Insel C apparatus was made available on 10th July 1943 and has been in regular production until the last few months. "It must be recorded at this point that the first new Insel was produced by the industry about a year after Köthen had produced an improvised apparatus. Moreover, the Technisches Amt and industry were unable to give the Signals branch a Freya which was not jammed. Assistance had to be sought from Köthen, who produced Köthen bands which alone enabled the further operation of Freyas to take place. "In view of the jamming situation the Chef N.V.W. demanded on 19/12/42:- (a) Freya frequencies below 1.90 metres. (b) A Voll Wismar band which allowed constant frequency change (c) Long waves over 4 metres, with the suggestion that the Yagi aerial arrays should be used. "The following comments must be made on the foregoing demands:- (d) The first Freya below 1.90 metres (Flum 41) became available on 2/7/43. (e) The first Voll Wismar was delivered in May 1943, but in spite of this the first mass-produced apparatus was not available until July 1944, and then only in small numbers. (f) The problem of long-wave Freyas was never taken up by either the Technisches Amt or by industry. This problem was solved by the development by Köthen of Yagi aerials, and these were first built into operational sets in September 1944. "Jamming by Window. "The possibilities of jamming by Window were made quite clear on 17/3/1943 and a requirement for an anti-jamming device for all radar apparatus was formulated. Not until 19th June 1944, that is, one year and three months later, was the Freyalaus, which had been developed by ZVH, made available by the Chef TLR. "Since it was clear that a change-over to longer waves to avoid Window was the only possibility available at that time, the only solution was the use of long-wave apparatus (Yagi Köthen Grau). With this type of equipment it has been possible for some months to obtain an early picture free from jamming. Further Yagi wavelengths were developed and units are being equipped with them. "To make recognition of new radar wavelengths impossible for the enemy, a short transmission system (Kurz Zeit Messung) described above was formulated as a requirement on 23/9/42. At the data of writing this has not yet been introduced." 48. The decision to avoid Window by using longer wavelengths appears to have been taken on the results of some experimental work. When Window 1.80 metres long was produced against SN2, Insel C was severely affected, and research work was done on the susceptibility of different wavelengths to Window of this length. The diagram produced in Appendix I shows the effect produced by a standard quantity of 1.80 metre Window at a range of about 70 km. on various types of Freya. 49. As a result of this experimental work, the Signals staff realised that it was an advantage to increase the wavelengths as the intensity of the signal received fell off sharply above 3.80 metres. It was considered impracticable to put a longer Window into use and as a result the so-called-Köthen bands were produced. 50. The Germans were unaware that we were dropping very long Window {rope) at a later date. A certain number of specimens of this had been picked up and it had been assumed that it had something to do with meteorological observations. 51. In an interesting publication Funkmessnachrichten No. 19 dated 25th February 1945, it is stated that the C-Insel of Freya suffered worst from jamming by ground transmitters but gelb-rot, grün, braun, weiss and grau Köthen bands and the A, B and D Insel were also jammed at times. 52. Airborne transmitters were beginning to jam the Köthen grau band, while Köthen braun and D Insel experienced occasional interference by airborne-electronic jammers. Only on one occasion had jamming of the Köthen weiss been observed from the air. 53. The G.A.F. was vitally interested in the Köthen grau band which was the main stand-by for the early-warning service, and it was this band and the Köthen blau on 8.80 metres about which instructions had been given that they were to be switched on only for very short time in emergency. About 40 Köthen grau equipments were in operation. 54. The range claimed for Freya was 80-120 km., with a range accuracy of ±300 metres and D/F accuracy with split beam (A.N.) 1/3°. 55. It is stated in the same document that by February 1945 all Freya equipments, with the exception of some motorised units, had been fitted with the Freyalaus. A new type of A-J device, which is however, not described, named the Prüflaus was at this time being tested on a few sites. Freya Flamme. 56. A certain number of Freyas in the Insel D band were set aside for the purpose of triggering off British I.F.F. when this had been left on in aircraft inadvertently. It was claimed that, provided the aircraft was flying at a considerable height, ranges of up to 450 km. had been obtained with the Freya Flamme. D/F was difficult due to the wide spacing of the short pulses and no continuous echo beingobtained. The Germans were aware that six codes were transmitted by British I.F.F. and believed that they know the significance of the various identifications. 57. Initially this proved a most useful very long-range early warning, but the number of aircraft flying with I.F.F. had been greatly reduced during the last year of the war. Freya Fahrstuhl. 58. The Freya Fahrstuhl, designed by Köthen, is a Freya with height—finding facilities obtained by making use of the reflected ground wave. It was first introduced in early 1943, but owing to unknown causes, a certain amount of trouble was experienced and only about eight equipments were in operation on 1st January 1945. The original requirements were formulated in 1940 for a Freya type apparatus to give elevation. 59. This set had a range of 220 km. and was used for height finding by the early—warning service and also as an aid to Flak if the Würzburg were jammed. The wavelength used was 2.00 metres (Köthen gelb). The Freya Fahrstuhl was originally intended as an early-warning radar giving height, but the few produced were largely used to give height to Flak when the latter's Würzburg was jammed. Würzburg. 60. The history of the development of this apparatus will be told more fully in the next and final report of this series which will deal with German Flak radar, for which purpose it was originally designed. 61. The original Würzburg Insel A had no split beam D/F but was nevertheless used for early attempts to control night fighters. 62. The frequency used by Würzburg A was a single spot frequency, between 53.0 and 54.2 cm. It was first introduced in any quantity for raid reporting purposes in the autumn of 1940, when it was used to obtain the height of aircraft observed on the Freya. Its maximum range was about 25 km. 63. The next type introduced was the Würzburg C with A.N. D/F facilities and range of 25 km. The first Würzburg C’s came into service in the summer of 1941. A few were used for controlling night fighters, but the great majority was used by Flak. The Würzburg C’s were on fixed frequencies in the band 53.0 to 54.2 cm. 64. The final form of Würzburg, the D, had still only a 25 km. range operationally, but was a general improvement over the C with split D/F facilities giving an accuracy of ± ½° and range accuracy of ±50 metres. It was introduced in the autumn of 1941 believed to have been used for Flak purposes only. 65. The original sets were in the frequency band known as Insel A 53.0 - 54.2 cm but later a B band from 56.7 to 58.0 and a C band from 62.3 to 63.8 were introduced. 66. Finally a Würzburg was manufactured with wide band aerials using the Urechse equipment which allowed any wavelength between 53.0 and 63.8 cm. to be used. The Urechse transmitter was being generally introduced in the spring of 1945. Würzburg Riese. 67. The Würzburg Riese was introduced in 1941, and from the beginning was mainly used for the close control of night fighters on the Himmelbett system. In all, 452 sets were in operation on 1st January 1945. A few sets were used for providing the Gross Batterien, situated at Berlin and other places, with information for their anti-aircraft operations, but these were of the Riese G (Gustav) type with Freya aerials incorporated in the paraboloid, so that a 50° wide search beam was provided as well as the 13° main beam on 50 cm. 68. The wavelength used for the Freya section of the Riese G was originally 2.20 Metres, but wavelengths of 1.80 metres and 1.70 metres were also introduced, and it was intended to use 1.60 metres in the future. The Würzburg section of the Riese used the A and B Insel of the Würzburg bands, namely 53.0 - 54.2 cm. and 56.7 - 58.0 cm. The range of the Würzburg Riese was about 70 km. and its range accuracy was of the order of ±50 metres. 69. Some ten of the sets used for Flak were provided with Voll Wismar using the Schwarz Echse transmitter on a new wavelength of 1.50 metres. 70. The additional Freya wavelength was found to be particularly valuable against U.S. day bombers, which usually only jammed the Würzburg 50-60 cm. band and left the Freya band unjammed. Wassermann. 71. The original purpose for which Wassermann was introduced was to obtain a more powerful early warning radar with a greater range than Freya, and it was therefore the G.A.F. equivalent of the novel Mammut. Three main types of Wassermann were produced, the L, S and M. 72. The Wassermann L (Leicht = light) was produced by Gema and was said to have a range of 200 km., an accuracy in D/F of ± ½° and in range of ±5 km. The first set came into use about the summer of 1942; two types were manufactured, namely L.I, on 2.40 metres and L.II on 2.01-2.27 metres, in which spot frequencies (Streuwellen) at 15 mc/s intervals were available. About 25 of these were built. They were constructed as lightly as possible so that they would be transportable, which was considered specially important for the Balkans and in Norway. It was estimated that they took about 3-4 weeks to erect. They had, however, a disadvantage that in strong winds the whole tower was apt to be blown over. 73. The Wassermann S (Schwer = heavy) was also constructed by Gema and its accuracy was comparable with the L, except that ranges of 300 km. were obtained. The first equipment was erected towards the end of 1942 and in all some ten became operational. The first seven sets erected (S.1 to S.7) used wavelengths of 2.40 or 2.46 metres. These numbered S.8 to 10 used 2.36 metres, 2.34 metres and 2.29 metres. These sets took something over 4 months to build, but they were at least more robust than the Wassermann L. 74. The final form of Wassermann, the M. (Mittel = intermediate) was designed by Siemens. Its accuracy in D/F and range was about the same as the other two types but a maximum range of about 220 km. was obtained. 75. The first types introduced were the M.I and M.II in the autumn of 1943. Both used frequencies in the 2.01-2.20 metre band but the M.II allowed different frequencies within this band to be used on the Wismar principle. 76. The M.III used the 1.20-1.90 metre band, and was of the wide band Voll Wismar type but only two sets were built, as it was succeeded in the spring of 1944 by the M.IV which gave wide-band facilities from 1.90-2.50 metres. Some twelve M.IV. were in operational use by January 1945, and more were being produced. 77. The latest form of Wassermann was to be the M.V. which was a wide band equipment working on 2.50-4 metres, of which one experimental set had been set up on the Baltic coast. 78. Since about the beginning of 1944 an electrical compensating arrangement had been built into the Wassermann which allowed the beam to be swung in elevation, and an elevation of about 15° could be obtained. The A-J device Wasserfloh with Doppler effect was fitted first towards the end of 1944. 79. Generally speaking the Wassermann was a disappointment. Production of Elefant was postponed as the original estimate of Wassermann's range, as late as autumn 1943, was that it would give 400 km. coverage. Wassermann never succeeded in giving coverage much over 200 km. Mammut. 80. This coastal radar equipment which was known to the Allies as the "Hoarding" was really a Naval coast-watching radar of which some 8-10 specimens were operated by the Luftwaffe. It had the advantage that the polar lobe was well beamed - more beamed than the Wassermann - and, therefore, it was not very susceptible to jamming but it took about 8 months to erect and was costly and unvieldy. The comparatively narrow lobe scanned electrically by means of a phase shifter, termed a compensator. The wavelength used was the original Freya band 2.40 metres and the range achieved some 300 km. No height finding was available. Elefant. 81. The Elefant, sometimes referred to as See-Elefant was produced by the Reichspost and was designed in part by Ober Postrat Dr. SCHOLZ. At the end of the war three equipments of this type had been built and a further three were in course of erection. The wavelength used was comparatively long, in conformity with policy of escaping the effect of Window by increasing the wavelength. Of the three sets built, two were in the 7.90-8.80 metres band, and the remaining one in the band from 10.70-12 metres. 82. A D/F accuracy of 1° was obtained and range accuracy of ±4 km. The first set was created in the summer of 1942. But it underwent constant improvement and its form was not finalised until 1944. In November 1943 the Technisches Amt refused definitely to sanction the large-scale introduction of Elefant as although a range of 400 km. was obtained similar results were expected (but never obtained) from the Wassermann. A few were, however, built by Köthen in the field. 83. In order to prevent the long wavelength from being compromised, the Elefant was only used for short periods and when the air situation was not clear to the ear1y-warning service. This was the more important as it was realised that Elefant could easily be jammed. The normal array consisted of two 100 metres high towers. Heidelberg. 84. One of the present P/W believed that experiments were being carried out with an early warning set on a wavelength of between 18 and 20 metres which was to be called Heidelberg. He understands that jamming interference was encountered, as the set operated on the frequency band used by W/T traffic, and for this reason the project was dropped. P/W stated that it was hoped to obtain very great ranges, as the waves would conform to the earth's curvature. There may, however, be some confusion in his mind with the Klein Heidelberg system described below. Klein Heidelberg. 85. The name Klein Heidelberg was given to a system utilising reflections from aircraft of the pulses emitted by British radar stations or by distant German stations. Strictly speaking, therefore, it was not a radar set at all. 86. The results obtained were satisfactory at the three stations used, but at the time of its invention by Ober Postrat SCHOLZ, in 1941, it was not regarded as of particular importance, as their radar was not being jammed. 87. In 1944, when jamming became serious, the Klein Heidelberg system proved of great value. Its D/F was poor but range was adequate for early warning information. 88. It was noticed in October 1944 that our 25 cycle CH stations had started to change their p.r.f. but a radio locking system was improvised within six weeks and thereafter no trouble was experienced. Tests were made to utilise the Gee pulse sources, but the system worked adequately with CH and the experiments were not pursued. 89. When he was interrogated on this matter Dr. SCHOLZ stated that he understood that the results obtained at the Römö station were surprisingly good, despite the great distance from Great Britain. Würzmann. 90. The Würzmann was the name given to an experimental coastal set which was to be used for the location of low flying aircraft. According to P/W, it was a Jagdschloss Michael B aerial array set up on end. The aerial array of the Jagdschloss Michael B consisted of a double row of 18 Würzburg mirrors and measures not less than 56 metres x 7 metres. 91. This gigantic erection was mounted so that the electric centre of gravity was 50 metres above sea level and produced, in fact, a Würzburg beam which was very narrow in azimuth. With its aid it was claimed that aircraft flying at 0 feet could be seen at a range of 20 km. Tiefentwiel. 92. Tiefentwiel was the code name applied to an aerial array placed high above ground using the Hohentwiel A.S.V. set with the intention of detecting low-flying aircraft coming in over the sea. No details of the aerial array or method of operation were known but it was stated that the Tiefentwiel achieved as good results as the Würzmann, namely a range of about 30 km. Hohentwiel Boden. 93. Funkmessnachrichten publication No. 19 announced the introduction of a short-range highly-mobile early-warning radar called Hohentwiel Boden which could be erected in 15 minutes. The set consisted essentially of the Hohentwiel A.S.V. set with an aerial array mounted on the top of a 10' high mast. This improvisation was carried out by the Ln. Versuchs Regiment Köthen, who stated that individual targets could be seen at a range of 30-35 km. and formations at 60-70 km. It was to be used in the front line to give advance warning of raids. PANORAMIC RADARS. Propeller. 94. Some time in 1943 the firm of Lorenz produced an idea for a P.P.I. presentation for early warning to which they gave the code name "Propeller". This set relied on extremely rapid rotation of the aerials and used a wavelength of about 50 cm. 95. Just before the set was officially demonstrated to the G.A.F. it exploded. All the apparatus was lost and the project was abandoned. Jagdschloss F. 96. The first type of early-warning radar set giving panoramic display which come into operation in usually referred to as the Jagdschloss, although it’s official designation is Jagdschloss F, to distinguish it from later types, such as the Michael B and Z. It was produced by the firm of Siemens and was first used in operations in early 1944. About 65 Jagdschloss F equipments had been manufactured by the end of the war. 97. Equipments No. 1 to 62 were of the Voll Wismar type using wide band aerials and covering the band 1.90-2.20 metres. From 63 onwards the frequency band to be covered was 1.20-1.90 metres. A document mentions Jagdschloss lang (=long) with a wavelength of 8.0-10 metres. No information about this has been obtained. 98. These sets were used exclusively by the early-warning service and gave a range of about 100 km. with a D/F accuracy of 1° and a range accuracy of 4.5 km. 99. The range accuracy depended largely on the presentation on the 40 cm. P.P.I. tube. At 100 km. the area of error was stated to be 5 x 5 km. but Köthen was attempting to improve the presentation so that blips could be read to a greater accuracy by introducing electrical range rings. 100. Another trouble that was being experienced in February 1945 was that the 50 cycle frequency at the national electric grid affected the presentation so that the blips which should have appeared as small arcs actually appeared as an arc with a wavy out-line. 101. The P.P.I. tubes produced by Siemens were being modified to avoid this imperfection while the Fernseh A.G., who also produced tubes for Jagdschloss, were working on the problem. It was believed that a new type of "Tonfrequenz" cable would be necessary. Particular attention was being paid to this point because of the difficulties in reading the tube caused by window. 102. According to a document a new type of valve called the Nullode was being introduced at this period to replace the 8D.6 diode in the Simultan unit. 103. It was proposed to introduce a selecting switch, by means of which three alternative pictures could be produced on the P.P.I. tube. The first picture showed all blips present on the tube, the second position allowed the I.F.F. to be switched in, while the third was a purely I.F.F. picture in which only friendly aircraft with I.F.F. operating came up. 104. The I.F.F. problem had not been fully solved and it is stated in a document that a separate FuGe control set is necessary to assist in obtaining unequivocal identifications. 105. In this same document mention is made of the Münchhausen system which was to use coloured photographic films to distinguish between Windows and moving targets; stationery targets would appear on the film as dark spots while moving aircraft would appear as spots with red and blue edges in the direction of movement. This system had been worked out at Werneuchen and in February 1945 the first apparatus was in use with a Jagdschloss equipment in the field. The film, however, took between one and two minutes to develop. 106. Further difficulties in the form of dead zones were being encountered with Jagdschloss and it is suggested in Funkmessnachrichten publication No. 19 that a wire netting surface with a radius of 50-60 metres should be built round the Jagdschloss in order to get rid of the lower dead zone and to aid in increasing the range against high flying aircraft. It is stated that one ton of iron wire netting necessary for each site. 107. According to P/W the electrical jamming of Jagdschloss was never very severe, particularly as it had Voll Wismar. The fact that it was causing trouble was, however, proved by the fact that in Funkmessnachrichten publication No. 19 it is stated that a number of special cameras had been provided and were in use at various Jagdschloss sites to take pictures of the type of jamming encountered in order to ascertain what measures could be undertaken against jamming. 108. A so-called electric lens was to be used as a means of seeing through Window. This was an arrangement whereby a magnification of between 2 and 3 times natural size could be obtained of a circular area of the picture. The area which could be magnified could be chosen but was limited to circles whose circumference passed through the centre of the tube, but did not reach the edge of the 40 cm. P.P.I. tube. Jagdschloss Michael B. 109. A ponderous aerial array of two rows of eighteen Würzburg mirrors measuring 56 metres long x 7 metres high was used in the Würzmann experimental early-warning radar, and formed the serial array for Jagdschloss Michael B with the array in a horizontal position. The wavelength employed, was that of a Voll Wismar 53.0-63.8 cm. 110. By means of this aerial a beam of ½° horizontal width was obtained and a range of about as much as 250 km on single aircraft was expected. It was also expected that the narrowbeaming of Michael B would be of great assistance in avoiding Window. The dead zones were to be overcome by switching the frequency to another wavelength in the Voll Wismar band II, which was believed to run from 50-60 cm. The first set was to be ready in April 1945. Forsthaus F. 111. This apparatus was designed by Telefunken to fulfil the same purpose as the Jagdschloss Michael B using the so-called Euklid 25-29 cm. waveband employed by the Navy. Once more a very long aerial array 48 metres long and about 8 metres high was used, employing a cylindrical paraboloid. A wave guide antenna (Hohlraumstrahler) was placed along the focal line with a second and a third wave guide parallel to it above and below respectively. The object of these two supplementary wave guide aerials was to provide displaced beams and so avoid the dead zones. A range of 220 km. was expected against single aircraft but no details were available as to whether it had come into operational use. Forsthaus KF. 112. In order to introduce as rapidly as possible a panoramic early-warning radar in the West on a hitherto unused wavelength, a smaller form of the Forsthaus F called the KF was to be introduced while the F was being completed. It was planned so that it could be used on a railway wagon; the revolving aerial array was only 24 metres long and it was expected to give a range of 120 km. The wavelength and electrical circuits used were exactly the same as in the Forsthaus F. Dreh Freya. 113. This set, which was also known as Freya Panorama, was first introduced in June 1944. It consisted of a Freya aerial of the Breitband type working in Bereich I (1.90-2.50), the frequency of which could be adjusted at will. The aerial was so built that it rotated through 360° and gave a remote panoramic presentation. About 20 equipments were in use in January 1945. The range claimed for it was only about 100 km. Jagdhütte. 114. This apparatus, which was produced by Siemens, gave a panoramic P.P.I. display of the German I.F.F. responses, using 24 metre or 36 metre rotating aerials. The wavelength employed was 2.40 metres and it was planned, with its aid, to trigger off the FuGe 25A. In this way friendly fighters were to be controlled from the ground at ranges up to about 300 km. It was fully realised that if the FuGe 25A frequency was ever jammed the Jagdhütte would be useless, but it was not considered likely that the Allies would attempt to jam it. 115. On the 1st January 1945 the first Jagdhütte equipment was being erected, and it was expected that production would amount to two per month thereafter. At the end of the war about 8-10 were being built, but there is no information as to how successfully they were employed. Jagdwagen. 116. Jagdwagen was designed as a mobile Panoramic radar to control fighterAs at close ranges immediately behind the front. It was a project of the firm of Lorenz. The aerials were considerably smaller than the Jagdhütte, the array being only 8 metres long. The aerial array was to be mounted on the Kumbach stand as used in the Egerland Flak set. The frequency bend used was that of the A.S.V. set Hohentwiel namely 53-59 cm. 117. The horizontal beaming was of the same order as that in the full Jagdschloss F, namely about 6°, and ranges claimed for it were of the order of 40-60 km. for medium heights. A small P.P.I. tube of about 15 cm. diameter was used. 118. In February 1945 the first sets were being tried out at Werneuchen but it was hoped to produce the Jagdwagen, in series, as a fully mobile panoramic set operated by a motorised company to install them on aerodromes so that a picture of the local air position could easily be obtained. Jagdschloss Z. 114. The Jagdschloss Z was the centimetric form of Jagdschloss, which was in development by Siemens; the rotating aerials were to be about 24 metres long. These sets were to give an extremely narrow beam and so offer protection against jamming. The range expected was of the order of 100 km., and although the first experimental equipment had been built it was not expected that sets would came into operational use until the autumn of 1945. Forsthaus Z. 120. The Forsthaus Z was another form of 9 cm. panoramic for early warning, which was produced by the firm of Telefunken. It differed from Jagdschloss Z mainly in the design of aerials and was about in the same stage of production. No information could be given as to the advantages or disadvantage possessed by Jagdschloss Z. NOTE: One of the documents brought to England by General MARTINI’s staff contained a list of the frequency coverages mentioned in this report, and is reproduced in Appendix II."
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German Radio Countermeasures
"SECRET A. D. I. (K) Report No. 380/1945
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W AS THE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED UNTIL COMMENTED ON AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. RADIO AND RADAR EQUIPMENT IN THE LUFTWAFFE – IX. German Radio Countermeasures. 1. This report is the ninth of the series dealing with radio and radar equipment in the Luftwaffe. The present information was mainly obtained from Dr. Ingenieur SCHOLZ, a civilian employee of the Reichspost Zentrale who was in charge of a sub-section of Abteilung 6 of the Generalnachrichtenführer dealing with the problem of RCM (radio countermeasures). 2. Interrogation of this man has been supported by information gained from other members of General MARTINI's staff and by a number of relevant documents of recent date in possession of the General's Chief of Staff. Some useful additional help was given by two engineers who had recently been engaged in testing ground and airborne jamming equipment at the G.A.F. research establishment at Werneuchen. 3. The radio countermeasures used by the Germans have been treated in this report under four headings, the first being a brief historical account of their employment, and the other three dealing in turn with RCM against communications, metric radar and centimetre radar. The types of jamming transmitters referred to by name, or of which a mention has been found in documents, are listed in alphabetical order and their functions briefly described in Appendix I to this report. THE GERMAN MONITORING SERVICE AND EVOLUTION OF COUNTERMEASURES. BASIS FOR COUNTERMEASURES. 4. At the beginning of the war the G.A.F. High Command was not radio minded; GOERING in particular has been frequently accused by his underlings of paying no attention to technical matters. In the opinion of General MARTINI's staff, the vital importance of radio warfare and radio countermeasures was only truly appreciated by the General Staff towards the end of 1944. Those responsible for German jamming, therefore, had great difficulty in obtaining permission to use the countermeasures to the extent that they could have wished. 5. The countermeasure organisation relied in the first place on the German "Y" service, which formed Abteilung 3 of General MARTINI's staff, to give advance information of new radio activities, and for this purpose it employed a staff of expert radio engineers whose task was to identify and explain any new frequencies or types of transmissions received. If, however, novel features in a monitored transmission were observed and could not be explained, a commission for the investigation of the particular subject was set up. This commission was composed of representatives of the "Y" service and of the Development (E) departments of the R.L.M., representatives of the research (F) department of the R.L.M., and such experts from the leading firms as had special experience in the field of radio which was thought to be in question. 6. Evidence collected by listening, though it could be very valuable as intelligence, did not necessarily tell the whole story or indicate the most suitable form of countermeasures. As far as airborne equipment was concerned, statements made by prisoners of war often helped to fill out the details and the capture of equipment and its identification with the new transmission was of great value, even if the equipment was severely damaged. 7. Intelligence information from the above three sources could usually be pieced together to tell the whole story, so that decisions could be taken as to whether radio countermeasures were required. 8. The Germans relied very largely on the laboratories and experience of the Reichspost Zentrale (RPZ) to solve the technical problem of how and with what equipment to jam, and they obtained for the duration of the war the loan of an engineer of that organisation (the present P/W) who was put in charge of RCM and carried out liaison with RPZ to this end. EVOLUTION OF COUNTERMEASURES. 9. The decision to jam a particular type of transmission rested very largely with General MARTINI and was often taken despite the protests of the "Y" service section of his staff, who were interested professionally in monitoring all transmissions. Particularly in the case of R/T, the "Y" service insisted that more strategic and tactical information could be obtained by D/F’ing enemy transmissions than any tactical advantage which might be gained by jamming them. 10. As an instance of the extent to which the decision lay with General MARTINI the following case was quoted: In 1942 Allied night fighters were becoming a nuisance in the Mediterranean area but General KESSELRING had to ask General MARTINI’s permission to jam their ground-to-air R/T control in his theatre of operations and only then could the countermeasures be undertaken. 11. The first German radio countermeasures were instituted in September 1940 during the day bombing raids of the Battle of Britain and were directed against British radar operations in the Channel. The first and most important site used was that at Mont Couple behind Calais were, by the end of the war, a battery of some 35 jammers had been set up. 12. Radio countermeasures against Gee were put in hand in the summer of 1942 and at about this same time the first attempts were made to jam A.S.V. in the Channel. From this time on, the countermeasure warfare increased and consideration was given to jamming all types of new radar devices. 13. In about 1943 it was realised that countermeasures might well be called for on every wavelength, and Dr. SCHOLZ put up a requirement to the Reichspost Zentrale (RPZ) laboratories for a series of jammers to be designed for covering all wavelengths from 50 cm. upwards. These jamming transmitters were designed in the Potsdam RPZ laboratories, and improvements were constantly being incorporated in them so that if there was a sudden call for countermeasures on an as yet unused frequency, a practical design was available and apparatus could be built at short notice. 14. As a result of this policy new countermeasures could be put in hands quickly, but in practice they usually took considerably longer to organise than might theoretically be expected because the ground crews had to be trained in their use. Dr. SCHOLZ stated that with a few exceptions these ground crews were of second-rate material and it was frequently a matter of weeks before they were sufficiently well-trained for the countermeasures to become effective. COUNTERMEASURES AGAINST COMMUNICATIONS. GROUND-TO-GROUND COMMUNICATIONS. 15. With the possible exception of communications between land and convoys, P/W believed that no attempt was made to jam Allied W/T communications on the ground. Listening to them was considered to be of the greatest strategic intelligence value and little or no tactical object was served by jamming. 16. Radio countermeasures against the B.B.C. news service were in the hands of civilian authorities, and the G.A.F. had nothing whatsoever to do with them. Dr. MEINEL of the Reichspost was believed to have been responsible for the production of the type of jamming modulation which was generally used. GROUND-TO-AIR R/T. 17. The question of jamming Allied ground-to-air and air-toair R/T was one of the points most strongly disputed between the "Y"-service and the operational side of the G.A.F. The "Y"-service maintained that by listening to and D/F’ing traffic, both strategic and tactical intelligence was obtained and that it was frequently their best source of early warning of attack by aircraft; as a result relatively few attempts were made to jam Allied R/T. 18. In the case of German raids on England the signals staff agreed that there was an advantage in jamming British R/T communications; this point arose when the possibilities of Mark IV A.I. were first realised early in 1941. The question of how to undertake countermeasures against British A.I. was discussed and the weak point of the system was held to be the R/T link from ground to air, because it appeared to be essential for the night fighter to be brought within 2 km. of the bomber before contact could be made. 19. The Reichspost Zentrale built an airborne R/T jammer set which was given the name of Karuso and was intended to prevent R/T being heard by the night fighter when the latter was within 3 km of its target. Within eight weeks the first Karuso equipment was ready and a total of 100 were built. With the cessation of the bombing of England in about May 1941, the majority arrived too late and Karuso was only used once in a limited number of aircraft in a bombing operation when, P/W believed, Plymouth was the target. 20. When in 1943 trouble with British night fighters was again being experienced in the Mediterranean, the Karuso sets were sent down to that theatre. There, however, the range of British A.I. was found to be about 4 km. instead of 2 km., so that the power output of Karuso had to be boosted to give it a range of 5 km. 21. The method employed was barrage jamming using two bands (100 - 110 mc/s and 110 - 120 mc/s) with mechanical condensertuned sweep through the band. There was not room for two transmitters in one aircraft so only half the band could be covered in any one German bomber. Karuso III, a later improvement, was to be capable of being tuned through 100 - 150 mc/s band but so far as is known, it was not put into use. 22. Subsequent tests of Karuso indicated that it had insufficient range, and by December 1944 the Starnberg, which was developed in 1940 by D.V.L. as a jammer against radar, had also been tried out but was likewise considered inefficient. A new set named Nervtöter was under development but never came into operational use. 23. It was decided that the jamming of R/T would be of value against air activity when the invasion took place and prior to D-Day some 50 or 60 modified Karl II jammers had been formed into a Stördorf (= jamming village) and assembled at a site on the Channel coast near Dieppe. With this assembly of jammers, all possible frequencies in the 100 - 150 mc/s R/T band could be covered. 24. A few days before the invasion the site was carpet bombed by the Americans and although the jammers had been somewhat dispersed, 90 of them had their aerials damaged or were put out of action. There was some delay in bringing up reserve motorised units and the invasion took place before they reached the Channel coast. As a result, no countermeasures against fighter R/T took place during the invasion. 25. In November 1944 a limited amount of jamming of fighter R/T in the 70 - 100 mc/s band was carried out on the western front by motorised units and from a few fixed sites. These countermeasures were on a restricted scale, owing to lack of apparatus, but it was hoped to interfere with Allied ground control of fighters and fighter R/T. AIR-TO-AIR R/T. 26. During defensive operations over the Reich against Allied aircraft, countermeasures were very rarely used owing to the insistence of the "Y"-service on the value of D/F’ing transmissions, particularly as the German early warning radar was heavily jammed. Early in 1945, however, it was planned to create four jamming villages (Stördorf) each with ten Karl transmitters in order to jam R/T during raids over German territory. The use of airborne jammers to carry out the same task had been considered but it was felt that airborne jamming was less rational than jamming from ground stations because the frequencies had to be constantly monitored. 27. By the end of the war a new jamming transmitter called the Feuerland had been developed by Blaupunkt. This allowed noise modulation to be used in addition to the more generally used Reichspost modulation. A few sets were sent up to the Holstein area just before the capitulation, but it was believed that they had never been used in operations. 28. The standard type of modulation which had been developed by Reichspost consisted of a number of "Kipp" frequencies - sharp triangular pulses produced by blocking oscillators - superimposed on the carrier wave. Tests of its effectiveness at audio frequencies were carried out early in the war and a statistical analysis of them seemed to show that it was the most effective modulation against R/T. RUSSIAN R/T 29. The airborne FuGe.10 was being developed for use as a jamming transmitter against the 3 - 6 mc/s band R/T used by the Russian Air Force. This apparatus never came into operational use. R.C.M. AGAINST METRIC RADAR EARLY WARNING RADAR 30. It was in August or September 1940 during the Battle of Britain that the first German countermeasures were directed against British ground radar. The site at Mont Couple behind Calais was used at first, but was gradually extended to a chain of ground jammers along the whole Channel coast, and ultimately there were sufficient to have every identified British ground radar station covered by at least one suitable jammer. 31. In 1940 the stations jammed were those in the 20 - 30 mc/s and 50 – 90 mc/s bands. Both ground stations and airborne apparatus carried in Ju.52's were used. By 1941 a chain of Karl jammers which also covered the 200 mc/s band had been set up along the whole coast. 32. During the initial period, various efforts were made to spoof our early warning radar. The first of these was the brain-child of Dr. SCHOLZ and was tried out in 1940. 33. Pulses radiated by one of our C.H. stations were picked up on the ground and re-transmitted on a different frequency to an aircraft flying some way behind the Channel coast. The aircraft re-transmitted the original radar pulse on the C.H. frequency, but a slightly different phasing, so that a phoney blip located over the Channel was received. Owing to the ease with which this phoney blip could be D/F'd and the spoof immediately revealed by a second station, this method was soon discarded. 34. About the beginning of 1941 a special experimental equipment called the Garmisch Partenkirchen, which produced no less than five different phasings and five phony blips, was tried out. For the same reason this was not much used in practice. How the "S & G" Got Through. 35. The first big operation on which the jamming chain against British radar ground stations was used was on the occasion of the passage through the Channel of the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau in February 1942. A few days prior to the operation Dr. SCHOLZ was specially brought from Berlin to supervise it. 36. The radar cover of our C.H. and C.H.L. had been carefully plotted and it was ascertained that the ships would come within its range as they passed off Fecamp, where they were due at 10 a.m. At that hour every available jammer was switched on. The fact that the ships passed through unscathed was, in P/W's opinion, the best proof of the effectiveness of the German countermeasures. P/W was not aware that we had either decimetre or centimetre radar in operation at this time. Siege of Malta. 37. In July 1942 P/W was sent to Sicily to take charge of an intensive jamming programme which he suspected was to be the precursor of the invasion of Malta, although he was never told so officially. The first four Karl jammers on 193 mc/s were brought into service in the neighbourhood of Noto en 3rd July 1942 and the number was later increased to eight, to cover both A.I. and ground stations. They were beamed on to the sites at Malta. These transmitters were half kilowatt, C.W. amplitude-modulated at 100 c.p.s. using an unsmoothed HT supply, plus a modulation of 150 - 200 kc/s. The reason for the amplitude modulation being unsmoothed was that there was a shortage of high-voltage smoothing condensers. 38. After a time it was observed that we had adopted frequency changes. The German jammers were however, controlled by monitoring receivers on sites so arranged that the jamming signals and the original radar signals could be seen side by side on a C.R. tube; this enabled the frequency change to be followed within a few seconds. A great aid to them in following and preparing for these changes was that new frequencies were invariably tried out during the day from Malta and the monitoring service could warn the jamming operators of frequencies likely to be employed. 39. It was noticed that signals on the 50 - 80 mc/s frequency were switched on during a raid and it was suspected that they were due to the height-finding equipment of the radar station controlling our night fighter which seemed to operate in a similar fashion to the German Würzburg. This opinion was confirmed when "Y" service heard a ground station say that they could give the range of the bandits but that height measurements were not yet available. 40. To jam the "height-finding" frequencies a Ju.52 fitted with eight jammers covering the 50 - 80 mc/s band was brought down to Catania. An hour before a raiding force became airborne this aircraft left Catania to patrol half way between Sicily and Malta and jam this band. 41. After P/W left, jamming was also carried out on the 42 mc/s band with the same type of Karl ground transmitter as was used for other frequencies. Modulation of Jammers. 42. When jamming out ground radar, H.F. modulation was always preferred to noise modulation since the equipment necessary to produce a given effect with noise modulation was much more extensive than for H.F. modulation, and in particular a large number of high-power valves was needed. The greater efficiency of noise modulation was not considered sufficient to warrant the extra power and extra equipment needed. It was also thought unlikely that H.F. modulation could be filtered out of the radar receiver without severe deterioration of the picture. Düppel (Window). 43. The idea of using window to spoof ground radar had occurred to the Germans in 1941 and a series of experiments was carried out in great secrecy over the Baltic in February 1943 (See A.D.I.(K) 334/1945 Part, IV). Very careful arrangements were made to ensure that the wind was in the right direction so that the window strips would fall into the sea and not in Sweden, or even on German occupied territory. 44. The effect of window was observed on all types of German ground radar deployed along the Baltic coast, and its efficacy as a countermeasure was realised. The German codename for Window was "Düppel" - a word with a very similar pronunciation to the German word "Dipol" (= dipole), indicating the function of the metal strips. 45. The Signals Staff realised that Düppel was a two edge weapon and although its development was completed sometime in 1942, and a certain quantity was manufactured, no use was made of it for fear of Allied retaliation. 46. The whole project was, in fact, kept so secret, that only a very few high officers and technical experts in the G.A.F. were aware of the scheme. So closely was the secret of Düppel guarded that the scientists were not even allowed to carry out research work to discover what anti-window measures could be applied to the various types of German radar. 47. Although the Germans were free to employ window as a countermeasure over this country after its first use by the R.A.F.in July 1943, it was realised by the Signals Staff that they had never used it to such good effect as the Allies. 48. The reason was that the small German bomber aircraft like the Ju.88 could only carry a very limited quantity and therefore could not produce a real window cloud. They therefore decided to drop small quantities scattered over a wide area in the hope of deceiving the night fighters and of producing the impression that a larger number of aircraft was engaged on a certain raid as well as in the hope that ground controllers might vector night fighters on to a window cloud instead of on to an aircraft. Final Policy against Early Warning Radar. 49. The general policy followed by the G.A.F. at the end of the war with regard to the countermeasures against early warning metric radar appear to be summarised in a document dated December 1944, which states that the use of ground jammers against all ground radar is, in principle, particularly desirable during German bomber raids on enemy territory, but that there is no advantage in using airborne jammers because the frequency of the ground radar has to be constantly monitored and followed. 50. This principle was not strictly adhered to because an airborne jammer for the 170 - 220 mc/s band named Kettenhund was used to a small extent in raids on the South-West of England in May 1944 (sec A.D.I.(K) 321/1944) but it was not considered to be very effective. 51. Some attempt was being made to develop a noise-modulated airborne transmitter named Wolke but it was never used operationally. METRIC A.S.V. 52. The first attempts to jam A.S.V. were made in the Channel in the summer of 1942. During the preparations for the proposed invasion of Malta it was found that reception of British A.S.V. transmissions was obtained at extraordinary ranges in the Mediterranean area. This was ascribed largely to the fact that the receivers were placed as high as possible - in some cases 3,000 foot above sea level - and attempts were made to jam A.S.V. by using Karl transmitters placed near them on high points of the coast of Sicily, Greece and Crete. 53. At about this time a Sonderkommando KOCH was formed and based at Athens-Kalamaki. Its duties were to monitor and jam A.S.V. and it was thought they used the Kobold airborne transmitter with a frequency range of 160 - 200 mc/s. It had the disadvantage that it could only be built into large aircraft and some doubts arose as to whether it was very effective. 54. Up to the of the war, the Bari ground jammers continued to be employed against A.S.V., particularly along the length of the Adriatic and along the Norwegian coast at points where German coastal convoys obtained no cover from islands lying off the coast. 55. In mid-1943 U-boats leaving Brest were suffering a serious increase in losses owing, it was thought, to the use of our A.S.V. a Sonderkommando Rastädter was formed with a few He.111 and Ju.88 aircraft for the purpose of listening to British A.S.V. on metric and centimetric wavelengths and determining what type of radar was being used with such effect (see A.D.I.(K) 38/1944). These aircraft carried, amongst other receivers, both Naxos and Korfu. The net conclusion reached as a result of these investigations was that Coastal Command was using a centimetric frequency (presumably H2S) for which the Germans had no jamming transmitter. 56. The Allied attacks on U-boats took place so far from the coast that ground jamming of A.S.V. on metric wavelength was impossible and too many aircraft were needed to carry out efficient airborne jamming. It was feared, too, that if airborne jamming were carried cut, it would only attract A.S.V.-equipped aircraft or surface vessels to the vicinity, and be a proof that U-boats were about. 57. Warning receivers were therefore installed in U-boats. The first of these - Metox - was used against metric A.S.V. It suffered from the disadvantage that its local oscillator radiated strongly, and it was suspected that we could home on to this radiation from 100 km.; the Samos receiver later replaced Metox. A form of Naxos was introduced to provide warning against 9 cm. A.S.V. and was used up to the end of the war. METRIC A.I. 58. The weak link in the British night fighter organisation was, as already mentioned, considered to be the R/T communication; the airborne jamming of British A.I. itself by German bombers or special R.C.M. aircraft was not considered a practical measure because it was believed that British night fighters would be able to home on to the jamming aircraft and severe losses were therefore to be expected. 59. No intentional jamming of Mark IV A.I. was ever carried out from the air or from the ground, although it was considered possible that Karl jammers against G.C.I. and harmonics of the Heinrich transmitter against Gee, and possibly of all transmitters jamming Oboe and C.H., may have had some effect. 60. In this connection P/W stated that it was extremely convenient for the Germans that we had so many equipment working on such a restricted frequency band in the 200 mc/s region. This fact has eased their jamming problem very considerably. GEE. 61. The value of Gee system of navigation referred to by the Germans as Hyperbel, is that it allows an aircraft to navigate by a radar method without transmitting any signals which could be used to D/F the raider from the ground. This threat was realised by the Germans in March 1942 when the existence and method of operation of the system was first discovered, but the decision to jam Gee was not taken until August 1942. 62. A jamming transmitter was hurriedly improvised out of the standard A.S. ground transmitter used for R/T traffic with the FuGe.16. This was modulated with the standard "Mont Couple" modulation at 150 - 200 kc/s. Prior to this makeshift coming into use, a certain Dr. MÖGEL had experimented locally with jamming transmitters but these only operated for a short time and no details are known of them. 63. An order for a large number of suitable jamming transmitters for countering Gee was placed in August 1942 and the first of these - 1/2kw. Heinrich - went into service in November 1942. As the Heinrich transmitters became available in quantity they were deployed all over Germany and by the end of the war some 270 were in operation against Gee. 64. Estimates of the effectiveness of jamming by the deployed Heinrich transmitters were obtained by flying captured Gee equipment and by questioning British P/W. The conclusion reached was that before the invasion the Gee chains were of no use further East than 4°. 65. After the invasion the situation changed, and in August 1944 a so-called Stördorf (= jamming village) was set up on the Feldberg in the Taunus area and controlled and run by the Reichspost Zentrale. Installation began in August and in September the first equipment came into use. 66. The Gee countermeasures from the Feldberg site were of a different type. In addition to a number of normal Heinrich transmitters, three new types of much greater power were used. These were Feuerzange, a very powerful pulse transmitter with a peak power of 1 megawatt, Feuerstein with a peak power of 120 kw. at 5,000 pulses and a smaller transmitter, Feuerhilfe with a power of 30 kw. which had been improvised by Köthen. These three powerful transmitters were used to pick up the Gee transmissions and retransmit them but with a very slightly different p.r.f. A keying arrangement was incorporated so that the pulses of the master and slave stations could be imitated. 67. In the immediate neighbourhood of the site it was expected that the pulse powers used would be so high that the Gee presentation screen would be completely jammed. At greater distances aircraft would receive on each frequency used three or four false pictures broadcast by the Feuerzange and Feuerstein. As they transmittal their spoof pictures on p.r.f's which differed only slightly from that used by the British stations, the effect produced was that the false pictures wandered very slowly over the true pictures so that it was difficult for an operator to tell which was the correct set of blips. 68. At the beginning an insufficient number of sets was available to carry out this spoofing on all the chains, but by January 1945 the site was fully equipped. The Germans were convinced that this system was successful because on 2nd March 1945 at 1230 p.m. a number of fighter bombers paid them a very unwelcome, visit and completely destroyed the site. 69. Consideration given to the idea of jamming the link between the Gee ground stations, was never carried out as it was thought that we would certainly anticipated such measures by providing a number of reserve links, possibly on centimetre wavelengths, or oven co-axial cable links. 70. When Gee jamming was first properly undertaken towards the end of 1942, a large number of monitoring stations placed about 100 km. apart were erected around the occupied coast form Brest to Norway. Each site had two Heinrich transmitting units, one operational and one spare, and monitored all possible wavelengths. Changes of phase were also reported so that German aircraft flying with Gee equipment could be notified by W/T. 71. The whole problem of Gee jamming was considerably simplified on the few occasions that we made unexpected frequency changes, because our transmitters lined up on the new frequency before they were used operationally. Had this not been done the effectiveness of the German jamming program, might have been considerably reduced. LORAN. 72. As has been mentioned in a previous report of this series, the discovery of Loran came as a great shock to the Germans because Professor von HANDEL had convinced himself that a long-range, comparatively long-wave pulse system would be too inaccurate for employment as a means of navigation. The Germans' first knowledge of the system was obtained about the middle of 1944 when maps were captured, and ultimately a complete apparatus was obtained from an American aircraft. 73. Attempts were made to jam it, and by March 1945, 10 to 20 one kW noise jammers, which jammed the ground wave satisfactorily within a radius of 50 to 100 km., were in operation. At this time transmitters to meacon the pulses were being built and consideration had been given to jamming the synchronisation of the transmitters from the ground, using a 100 kW. C.W. transmitter which was to be erected as near the front line as possible in order to be near the ground link. 74. The transmitter was ready and hat been taken to Thüringen but the disruption of transport and communications prevented it ever being used operationally. G.II. 75. The same equipment was used for jamming G.H., known to the Germans as Diskus, as was used for jamming Gee. 76. A number of jamming villages (Stördörfer) with from two to eight Heinrich transmitters were deployed throughout Germany. It was calculated in December 1944 that at 20,000 feet G.H. could only be received and used up to a line joining Emden and Kassel and from there swinging South in an arc to Stuttgart, while at 33,000 feet reception was thought to be possible up to an arc joining the mouth of the Elbe, Weimar and Augsburg. 77. In addition, it was planned to use the powerful Feuerzange and Feuerstein transmitters in an attempt to trigger-off the ground stations from the Feldberg/Taunus Stördorf used to jam the Gee chains. OBOE - METRIC WAVELENG. 78. In the autumn of 1942 a new type of radar signal in the 200 mc/s band was picked up by the German monitoring service at Calais. Statistics were kept and it was observed that these transmissions occurred mainly at night, and seemed to be associated with British M.T.B. activity in the Channel. 79. In about June 1943 the same type of radar signals was heard in Essen during a very heavy bomber raid on Cologne and Dr. SCHOLZ was able to correlate them with the dropping of T.I's visually observed. It was realised at once that these signals were the same as those heard at Calais and an immediate investigation was carried out. For this purpose a "noise investigation commission" was formed and a special experimental Freya with a number of D/F receivers was set up. The Freya was used to plot the course of the T.I.-carrying aircraft while the receivers D/F'd and monitored the signals. 80. Some 6 to 8 weeks after the signals had first been attributed to path-finders, a satisfactory story had been worked out by the Germans as to how Oboe, called by them Bumerang, worked. When this had been accomplished, subsequent Oboe raids were systematically monitored by the normal monitoring service. 81. At this time (August 1943) plenty of jammers were available because of the reserve apparatus available for use against 200 mc/s radar stations on the Channel coast. Ten sites were chosen to give jamming coverage over the Ruhr and eight ½ KW MCW Karl jammers employed at each site. The standard Mont Couple modulation also used against C.H.L. stations was applied giving 150 mc/s sine wave modulation at 100 c.p.s from an unsmoothed H.T. line. 82. The radio frequency was determined by picking up the aircraft return signal and tuning the jamming transmitter until the normal signal failed. Four frequencies in the 200 mc/s band were ultimately detected, but though the ground station frequencies were found to be steady, those of the airborne transmitter were not very stable. 83. Aerials recovered from crashes appeared to be mounted sometimes en the starboard wing and sometimes on the port wing of the aircraft. This fact, combined with some information obtained from a British P/W, caused the Germans to believe that the aerials were directional, and in order to jam more successfully, all transmitters were moved to the West of the Ruhr. 84. Jamming was almost entirely confined to the Ruhr area because this territory was far away, the most important target within the limited range of Oboe. The Germans were greatly relieved when Oboe was used against the rocket sites in Northern France, as the pressure on the industrial Ruhr was thereby reduced. From about December 1943, intermittent attempts were made to jam Oboe ground stations from the site at Mont Couple behind Calais. These were not very successful - a fact which was attributed to the beam width of British aerials. 85. In June 1944 a new form of jamming which was known as the Ballverfahren was suggested. This was essentially meaconing, using an A.B.G. responding transmitter in the hope of confusing the aircraft's return signals to the ground station. It was believed to work well, and P/W quoted as an example a raid on Nürnberg when aircraft deviated from their course as soon as the jamming was switched on and returned to their course when it lifted. 86. An instance of the success of Oboe jamming on the Ball system was quoted. In June 1944 an oil installation - possibly Wanne-Eickel - was the target, and all Oboe aircraft were successfully jammed. The T.I's were dropped late and some 8 km away from the target. As a result of this the main bomber force spread out and many aircraft were shot down. 87. Only one metric Oboe receiver fell into German hands and that was 90% destroyed; although the Germans knew the principle, therefore, the details of the airborne set were lacking, and the effectiveness of jamming could only be judged by the accuracy of bombing. 88. By observing on a Freya the point at which bombs left the aircraft, the Germans estimated the accuracy of Oboe as 300 x 300 metres for bombing from 9,000 metres, but a further 200 metres of ballistic inaccuracy occurred, giving an effective error of 500 x 500 metres in the Ruhr area. 89. The success of jamming Oboe was considered to depend partly on the training of personnel, so it was less effective on a new target than on an old target which had been jammed before. It was finally believed that the jamming was 90% effective. 90. The Germans claim to have been so familiar with Oboe that they were able to plot aircraft and withhold their jamming until the aircraft turned onto the bombing run. They were then able to identify the real target and localise the air-raid warnings so as to disturb industrial production in the neighbourhood as little as possible. 91. It is of some interest that on several occasions there was a consistently good concentration of bombs in an open field near Leverkusen, which P/W presumed to be due to an error in computing the exact location of the target. COUNTERMEASURES AGAINST RADAR. OBOE - CENTIMETRE WAVELENGTHS. 92. Signals which were recognised as Oboe by the type of coding were detected on a wavelength of 9 cm on the Channel coast about the spring of 1944. The normal monitoring service had previously intercepted unexplained 9 cm. signals in October 1943 but had not finally connected them with Oboe. 93. When 9 cm. Oboe was recognised, it presented the Germans with a great problem, as no jamming valves were available for that frequency and German intelligence had not given any hint that a centimetre version of Oboe might be produced. 94. By July 1944 a valve called LD.7o (= 7 ohne = without) had been produced, which was an LD.7 valve without cooling fins. A transmitter unit called Feuermolch, tuneable from 8.6 - 9.6 cm., pulse modulated and giving 3 kW peak pulse power, was than built. The whole apparatus, a Feuermolch transmitter together with a mirror reflector to achieve 200 km. range by beaming, was called Feuerball or A.B.G. (Anti Bumerang Gerät). 95. Jamming on 9 cm. Oboe was first used in operations in October 1944 at Weser and Leuna. The Feuerball jammer was used as a pulse repeater, after the frequency had been established by interrogating the aircraft. The jammer then set up ringing between the aircraft and jammer on the Ball system used against metric Oboe. 96. The latest type of centimetric meacon responder called Feuerburg had receiver and transmitter aerial mechanically linked to follow individual aircraft, the jammer aerial system giving a beam of 13° width. The aircraft was followed by hand by means of a spinning dipole in a receiving dish. 97. According to Dr. SCHOLZ the wavelength originally used by British centimetric Oboe was 9.26 cm. Sites were set up with both 200 mc/s and 9 cm. jammers so that either could be selected by a change-over switch on the receivers. 98. The jamming of Oboe by spoof massages was never tried although the meaconing jammers were fitted with a keying arrangement which would have allowed them to attempt this. 99. Oberleutnant Dr. BÄHRE of Ln. Versuchs Regt. Köthen had doubts as to the effectiveness of the Ball system and had proposed building a jammer with a very high p.r.f. to saturate the aircraft receiver with pulses so that the strength of each individual pulse re-radiated by the aircraft transmitter would be greatly reduced and the range of the system would therefore be considerably decreased. The Roland J transmitter which had been designed for H2S countermeasures was to be adapted by Lorenz for this purpose, but the idea was never put into operation as the end of hostilities occurred shortly after it was made. 100. An example of the success of jamming centimetric Oboe was quoted and concerned a series of five raids on Gotha. Three attacks, each with between three and five aircraft, were unjammed and all scored hits on the railway station. The fourth attack was jammed and no hits were scored on the same target. The fifth attack was again let pass without jamming and the station was once more successfully hit. 101. A further proof of the efficiency of the Ball system was that in plotting aircraft a diversion from track could be induced when the jammer was switched on and the aircraft would return to track if the jammer were switched off again. 102. On the only occasion on which a 9 cm. Oboe aircraft was known to have been shot down, it crashed in the Zuider Zee in shallow water where it could neither be reached from shore nor by sizable ship, and it was not possible to salvage the equipment. As a result, the Germans never obtained any Mark II Oboe equipment and detailed information as to how the system worked was always lacking. There was no explanation, for instance, of why certain aircraft transmitted pulses which did not appear to have normal Oboe coding, although the aircraft flow at heights and along tracks which obviously identified them with Oboe procedure. 103. No advance information of the target could be obtained from these aircraft but this was easily obtained from the W/T transmissions between ground stations. The W/T channel used was also monitored in order to see if jamming had been successful. It was also noticed that some aircraft would not respond to the interrogator but the reasons for this were not fully understood. These aircraft seemed to be operating on a wavelength above 9.6 cm. 104. A new valve to cover the 9.6 - 10.6 cm. band was being produced by Dr. GROOS. It was a 100-watt Klystron and it was proposed to jam with its aid as soon as it was finally produced. 105. Towards the end of the war there was a great increase in the daylight use of Oboe but P/W did not believe that the Americans had ever used it. With so many aircraft over Germany towards the end of the war correlated evidence was not available. H2S. 106. Shortly after the discovery of H2S in January 1943 panic orders were given for the production of a jammer. Later in the year Roderich, which was manufactured by Siemens and which used a Magnetron of theoretically 5-watt power, was made available. The transmitters were unbeamed and the power was so low that they were useless. By 1944 the use of Roderich had been discontinued. 107. The difficulties of jamming highly-beamed centimetric radar were so great that it was decided that all that could be done was to attempt to defend a few vital targets. The first target to be chosen was the Leuna works which was considered a good target. 108. The Reichspost Zentrale was called on for assistance and Dr. GROOS of that institution successfully developed a Klystron valve, which was a water cooled 100-watt valve tuneable by hand from 8.5 - 9.5 cm. This was built into the jamming transmitter which was known as the Postklystron. 109. In order to concentrate as much of the energy as possible to the aircraft, horns or paraboloid aerial reflectors were employed with the transmitters. About eight sites around Leuna were chosen, bearing in mind that the attacks always seemed to use a route coming in from the North, presumably because the best H2S pinpoints lay in this direction. 110. Four Postklystron transmitters were placed on suitable sites and spaced in frequency across the observed 30 mc/s band of H2S by putting them about 5 mc/s apart and making use of the side bands from 2 - 10 mc/s single frequency amplitude modulation. This barrage was used with low directivity. 111. A second type of jammer employed made use of the Roland transmitter built by Siemens, which had a 30° beam, but its development was abandoned about March 1945, as it was not considered very successful. 112. In yet a third system Postklystrons were used with a beamed aerial system giving a lobe 6° wide. The transmitter was coupled mechanically to the D/F, receiving aerial of a Korfu receiver, its aerial being provided with rotational eccentric split. The receiving aerial was trained on a single H2S bomber, which was followed manually. 113. The detection range for setting up was about 300 km. With the less beamed type, Roland, effective jamming ranges up to about 30 km had been obtained but with the narrow 6° beaming the H2S tube was completely obliterated at 40 km if the beam was focussed on the H2S aircraft. 114. One P/W had flown with H2S equipment installed in German aircraft in order to carry out experiments in ground camouflage against H2S with the aid of corner reflectors. The conclusion was that corner reflectors were ineffective. It had originally been planned to cover arms of the sea and lakes with corner reflectors, but in the first place too many were needed, and in the second place arrangements had to be made for these to remain fixed in a certain orientation in order to produce an effect. 115. Another suggestion had been made that metallic powder could be used to increase the reflectivity of an area. This was obviously no use as camouflage for a target, which was the end originally in view. Consideration was given to producing a dummy target with its aid but it was concluded that the quantity of powder necessary was so enormous that it was not a practical proposition. H2X. 116. The Germans had such leeway to make up with the production of 3 cm valves that no active countermeasures against H2X had been put in operation up to the end of the war. Development of a transmitter called Roland 2 was started in December 1944 with Telefunken Ceramic 3 cm valves believed to be known by the designation LD.72 and LD.77. 117. The set was to be modulated by 100 kc/s pulses and to sweep through a small radio frequency band. The power achieved was 50 watts average. With horn aerials a 20° beam was to be achieved. The range against an H2X set which had been captured undamaged at Wiesbaden was 20 km. in the initial experiments. A.I. 118. Owing to the strong beaming and method of sweep of centimetre A.I. the G.A.F. was doubtful if any jamming would be possible. No airborne transmitters against centimetric radar were developed. -o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. Acknowledgements are due to the various technical bodies, both British and American, who collaborated in producing the technical information contained in this report. A.D.I.(K) and S.D.Felkin, U.S. Air Interrogation. Group Captain. 29th August, 1945. A.B.G. (DALL) The A.B.G.(Anti Bumerang Gerät) meaconing jammer was first used in June 1944 and was an idea fathered by P/W. It was a responder beacon which was employed against Oboe to set up "ringing" between the aircraft return signal and the A.B.G. so that the aircraft return to the ground station was confused. The jamming transmitter had a 20 - 30 kW power in the case of the model used against 200 mc/s Oboe. In the A.B.G. used against 9 cm. Oboe (Feuerball) the power was 3 kW. BRESLAU. This was the pulse modulated transmitter with a range from 20 - 250 mc/s developed and built in the G.A.F. laboratories in PARIS. It was believed to have consisted of six or eight ½ kW transmitters. Some 50 sets only were put in hand and about half of them were completed. It was thought that they had been used against ground radar stations along the Channel but with what success it was not known. FEUERBALL. This was the name for the A.B.G. centimetric responder used to jam centimetre Oboe. The jammer was used as a pulse repeater and set up ringing between the aircraft and the jammer. It consisted of a transmitter using a klystron valve developed by the R.P.Z. which covered the frequencies 9.0 - 9.6 cm., backed by a beaming reflector. The peak power was about 3 kW. FEUERBURG. In order that the Feuerball transmitter should be beamed on to the transmitting aircraft, a beamed receiver was mechanically linked to the Feuerball set. The receiver was operated so that the receiving mirror was aligned on the aircraft and the Feuerball paraboloid mirror followed any changes of elevation or direction made by the receiving operator. This complete set-up of beamed Korfu receiver with a Feuerball beamed transmitter was known as Feuerburg. FEUERHILFE. This was a smaller form of Feuerstein improvised by Köthen with a peak pulse power of 30 kW. FEUERLAND. This was a two-stage inductive transmitter (final stage LS.1000) manufactured by Blaupunkt and served the same purpose as the Karl II. The first production sets were ready in March 1945 and were believed to have been sent to the Holstein area, but they were never used operationally. The frequency of the Feuerland could be adjusted from 30 mc/s to 300 mc/s by means of interchangeable H.F. coils. Different types of modulation could be introduced according to whether it was to be used against R/T or radar. Against R/T it was known to have had the four-tone chime modulation described under Nervtöter below. It could also be used with noise modulation with an adjustable bandwidth up to 2 mc/s. The power output was about 350 - 500 watts. FEUERMOLCH. This was the name given to the centimetric transmitting equipment of the Feuerball. FEUERSTEIN. The Feuerstein designed by Telefunken was used for producing a false picture on Gee sets, the keying of the pulses being carried out by equipment supplied by Telefunken and Siemens. A number of these sets were installed on the Feldberg. It was a high-power pulse transmitter at frequency range of either 20 - 52 mc/s (known as the Feuerstein 1) or 48 - 90 mc/s (known as the Feuerstein la). At a p.r.f. of 5,000 cycles it had a peak power of 120 kW. FEUERZANGE. This was the highest-powered pulse transmitter possessed by the Germans and was used in 1945 on the Feldberg to provide spoof Gee transmissions. The transmitter, developed by Dr. FREUDENHAMMER and built by Siemens, was water-cooled and could be modulated in exactly the same way as Feuerstein. The frequency range of the transmitter was 20 - 87.5 mc/s and at a p.r.f. of 5,000 cycles a power of 1 megawatt was claimed. It was considered a very effective set but only came into operation towards the end of 1944. GARMISCH PARTENKIRCHEN. Garmisch Partenkirchen was believed to be an improvised airborne apparatus, probably manufactured by Neufeld and Kuhnke of Kiel. It was used to a very limited extent in 1941. It consisted of a receiver which picked up a ground radar transmission and re-transmitted on the same wavelength but returned no less than five different pulses with slightly different phases with the object of creating false echoes. As these false echoes could be immediately identified if a second ground radar D/F’d the jamming aircraft, the idea was carried no further. GEWITTERZIEGE. An experimental spark, ground jamming transmitter for employment against flight radar and using a 1/2 wavelength dipole aerial in front of a reflector, was given the code name Gewitterziege. The band width was very large but it was claimed that it was an effective jammer at close range. HEINRICH. This transmitter was developed by the Reichspost Zentrale in 1942 with the specific intention of providing the G.A.F. with a jammer against the Gee navigation system. A large number of these sets was built and deployed all over Germany to jam Gee. A set of the same type, from which Heinrich had been developed, was used in Sicily in July 1942 for jamming the radar stations in the 50 - 80 mc/s band in Malta. In its ultimate form, Heinrich II, the transmitter had a power of 500 watts and covered the band from 20 - 90 mc/s in four separate sections. For this output it used four LS.180 valves arranged in parallel push-pull. It was 100% modulated by 150 kc/s sine wave with the addition of 100 cycle ripple obtained from an unsmoothed H.T. power supply. The set needed only two controls, one for the main tuning and one for the aerial coupling. The aerial consisted of a wide band dipole of squirrel cage circular section, with normal tapping at the feeding point. This one aerial was used in the entire frequency band from 20 – 90 mc/s. It was stated to have a standing wave ratio of 20% in voltage. KARL I. This was the standard jamming transmitter for use against British radar and was designed to cover the frequencies 90 - 250 mc/s in two bands. Development work on it was started at the end of 1940. The transmitter employed four LS.180 valves and had a power output of between 300 and 500 Watts. It was modulated by the standard Mont Couple 150 kc modulation on which a 100-cycle tone coming from an unsmoothed 50-cyle source of supply was imposed. The type of modulation employed could not be changed in the field. KARL II. This was on improvement of Karl I with few changes in the electrical specifications but it was really composed of two more powerful Karl I units with a common feed. It was also modified so that any desired standard type of modulation could be substituted at the site where it was employed, thus obviating the necessity for returning the transmitter to the factory, as was the case with Karl I. The Karl II employed an LS.1500 valve with an output of 2 kW, and besides being used against ground radar, it had been modified for use against R/T with the Post type of modulation. It was not known what degree of success had been achieved with this set. KARUSO. The original Karuso I was improvised by the R.P.Z. with the specific object of providing aircraft with an airborne transmitter to jam the R/T link between the British ground control stations and British night fighters. It was origina11y intended to sweep through the whole 100 - 120 mc/s band. 0wing to the relatively large frequency sweep, however, jamming was not vary effective, so it was manufactured in two forms, to sweep from 100 - 110 or from 110 - 120 mc/s. It had ultimately an effective range of about 5 km. and a power of about 30 Watts. Altogether, only 100 sets were manufactured. The designation Karuso II was given to a development which never got farther than the laboratory stage, but Karuso III was produced and covered the 100 - 150 mc band. The width of the jamming band was only 3 mc/s and the frequencies used was set up on the ground according to intelligence information given by the German "Y"-service. It was not known whether this set was used operationally. KETTENHUND. Kettenhund was a 30 watt air-born jammer developed in 1943 by a certain KETTEL of Telefunken covering the 170 - 200 mc band. It was used against British ground radar stations in raids over South-West England in 1944. Tests with the set led the Germans to the conclusion that it was not very effective. Modulation employed was a triangular wave with a frequency of several hundred kc/s. KLYSTR0N. This was the name commonly applied to a centimetre jamming transmitter witch was also referred to as the "Postklystron". It acquired this name because it made use of a centimetre klystron valve developed by Dr. GROOS of the Reichspost. A power of 100 watts was claimed for it. It was a CW jammer which could be tuned by hand between 8.5 cm. and 9.5 cm. It was fitted with a horn aerial to be aligned on the approaching H2S force. It was claimed that at a range of about 40 km. the H2S tube was completely obliterated when the Postklystron was focussed on an individual aircraft. This set came into operation about March 1945. KOBOLD. The Kobold was an airborne set designed by the Post specifically to jam A.S.V. and was originally used in the Mediterranean in conjunction with a Karl transmitter working from the ground. It was, in effect, half a Karl transmitter and used two LS.180 valves. A modulation of about 400 cycles originating from the aircraft transformer was superimposed on it. It had the handicap that it could only be built into very large aircraft. NERVTÖTER. Nervtöter I was designed as an airborne transmitter to jam Allied R/T but considerable difficulties were encountered in tuning it in the air to the frequency observed and it was never used in operations. As a result of the criticism made by T.L.R., the Nervtöter II, which was also believed to be known as FuGe. 40, was to be developed. This set employed an LS.50 valve in the final stage and the frequency of the R/T was to appear as a blip along is time base on a cathode ray tube, while the frequency, to which the transmitting jammer was adjusted, appeared on a similar blip on a second time base on the tube. By setting these two opposite each other the operator could easily see that he was jamming the required frequency. A so-called chime modulation of four changing tones was used. The power output was 25-30 watts and the frequencies ranged from 90-160 mc/s. Wide band aerials were to be used. This set had not got beyond the experimental stage by the end of the war. OLGA. Olga was a self-excited, grid-keyed, one valve transmitter (LS.180) developed by the Navy and had a frequency range of 150 - 200 mc/s and an output of about 300 watts. It was believed that a p.r.f. of 500, 700 or 900 cycles was used. This jammer was an early type used against British coastal watch radar without much success. RODERICH. This was the name applied to the first set developed by Siemens for jamming H2S when panic counter-measures were called for early in 1943. It used a magnetron valve with a maximum power output of 5 watts and was virtually of no use whatsoever. It took some months to develop; in the meantime, German knowledge of how to Jam H2S had increased to such an extent that it was never used. ROLAND. The Roland jammer was developed for use against H2S by Dr. WEHRMANN of Siemens and was said to employ a triode transmitter valve designated L.D.72 or possibly L.D.75. The wavelength was 8.5 - 9.5 cm. and with the aid of a horn aerial it produced a 30° beamed transmission, modulated, it was believed, by 100 kc sine wave and pulses of an unknown p.r.f. It had less than 50 watts average power. The range at which obliteration of the H2S tube was claimed, was about 30 km. The Roland II was the name applied to an attempt to produce a similar set on 3 cm using, it was thought, a LD.77 triode valve and a horn aerial a 20° beam. It is doubtful if it was used operationally as the valves had a very short life. STARNBERG. This was believed to be the precursor of Kettenhund and was designed by D.V.L. Adlershof in about 1940 but never used. In a document there is an indication that attempts were later made to use it as an R/T airborne jammer; A.D.I.(K) 231/1944 also gives an account of preparations to use the Starnberg operationally. WOLKE Wolke was believed to be the code name applied to the first German attempt to imitate a noise jammer like that used by the Allies. It was believed to use two L.D.5 valves in the final stage and to have a carrier frequency of 90 mc/s. The average power output was 15 - 20 watts, the width of the noise band being about 2 mc/s. As a result of the examination of Wolke the conclusion was reached that noise modulation required too many valves and too much power and that with the some number of valves a better effect could be obtained with other types of modulation. The set was therefore used for training night fighter crews to see through electronic jamming of SN.2."
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RADAR AT DOUVRES
SECRET A.D.I.(K) Report No.320/1944
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W AS THE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED UNTIL COMMENTED ON AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. A GERMAN RADAR STATION AT DOUVRES. 1. The information contained in this report was obtained from selected P/W of the 8th Kompanie of Ln. Regiment 53, who were captured on 17th June 1944 at a Radar station which they were manning 2 km. to the East of Douvres. The site consisted of two Würzburg Riese and two Freyas without the A.N. attachment; one of these Freyas was of the mobile type, and was not operational pending its being changed for one of the fixed type. 2. The operators as a whole were not particularly knowledgeable, but were able to give some interesting information on the way in which Allied air attacks affected operational efficiency of the station. One member of the station, an officer, was more knowledgeable than the others and added some odd scraps of information on other Radar equipment, which are summarised in this report. DAMAGE BY ALLIED AIR ATTACK. 3. The beginning of May saw the opening of almost daily air attacks on the Radar station at Douvres; from this time until D-Day the site was subjected to bombing, machine-gun and rocket projectile attack from Thunderbolts, Typhoons and Spitfires. 4. Surprisingly little resulted from those attacks; eight men had been killed and one barrack building had been burnt out, but the Radar installations themselves, protected as they were by heavy brick work, were practically undamaged. Apart from short intervals of a few hours for repairing cables and aerials severed by M.G. fire, the installations were, according to P/W, continuously in operation. 5. It was stated R.P. attack was particularly ineffective, but that machine gun fire into the cabins of Radar installations was both feared and effective. During air attacks, therefore most of the personnel of the station, including crews from the Würzburg and Freya cabins, went to the "Bunker" shelters. 6. On the night of 6th/7th June, the Kompanie had been busily employed in plotting Allied shipping and at 0100 hours on that night the Würzburg had plotted same 100 ships, which information was passed through to Jafü 5. At 0300 hours a large number of bombs fell in the neighbourhood and all the personnel left their posts to take to the shelters, leaving the apparatus unattended. 7. From D-Day onwards the Würzburgs and Freyas were kept operating even with the added weight of artillery and tank attack and the equipment was, in fact, operational until a few hours before the site fell to the Invasion Forces. It is, therefore, clear that in an operational sense the site survived nearly five weeks of constant attack. 8. When capture became imminent, however, all technical apparatus on the site was destroyed by explosive charges. The personnel put up a good defence, and it was not until the Allied tanks broke through the protective minefield that the station finally surrendered. PLOTTING ROOM. 9. The plotting room on this site, which correlated data received from the Freya and Würzburg, was housed on the top floor of a two-storey "Bunker" - a box like building partly sunk in the ground and constructed of concrete two metres thick. It had originally been intended that, in addition to handling normal Würzburg and Freya searches, the plotting room should also be employed for control of night fighters, but since there were no night fighters operating in this area, this latter function had never emerged; in any case the Seeburg Tisch had not been installed, although provision for it had already been made. 10. At the time of the Invasion, the plotting equipment consisted of a ground-glass screen, measuring some 8 x 12 ft. let into a wall, the glass bearing a map on which the plots were drawn. In addition to this a small-scale map of Northern France, overlaid with tracing paper, was laid flat on a table but this latter had never been put into use, having been forestalled by the Invasion. 11. In operation, plots from the Würzburgs and Freya were made in pencil, no distinction being made on the ground-glass screen between friendly and enemy plots. 12. The plotters, who wore earphones, received their information direct from the operators of the Freya or Würzburg, and transferred their plots to the ground-glass screen. A man called an "Ableser" then read off the plot from the ground-glass screen and telephoned it to Jafü 5 at Bernay, and latterly in the Western suburbs of Paris. 13. At one end of the room there was a platform on which sat a supervisor, who was responsible for the accuracy of the plotted information. He kept his eye on all plotting whilst listening to information as it came from the Radar equipment. He had a small telephone at his side through which he could plug in to any line from Würzburg or Freya. SOME NOTES ON RADAR EQUIPMENT. General Remarks. 14. The only knowledgeable P/W, an officer, gave as his opinion that British and American Radar technique are slightly ahead of their German counterpart. In German Signals circles, he said, it is openly admitted that any piece of Allied radar equipment is seized upon and studiously copied. 15. One major difference, he believed, was that Allied Radar equipment was always smaller and more compact in construction than similar German apparatus. Hand written comment: but the German Rotterdam weighs about half H2S - its British original! 16. Some few details on current German Radar Geräte were given by the above source. These are summarised below. Würzburg. 17. The Würzburg Riese on the station at Douvres were of the usual type, and had a search range of 30/40 kilometres. The frequency of both Würzburg Riese was stated by P/W to be 600 mc/s. "Window". 18. Some operators of the Würzburg and Freyas, although agreeing that they experienced interference from "window", interference which showed itself in a series of specks and lines on the presentation screen, maintain that because "window" travels more slowly than an aircraft, an experienced operator can distinguish the flight of the aircraft against the tracks of the "window". 19. The officer P/W, however, is sceptical about all anti— window devices, and believes that the German Radar authorities are seriously perturbed by it. 20. Some few weeks ago Goering, it is alleged, offered a cash prize of 300,000 Reichmarks to any Signals personnel who could invent an apparatus to outwit "window". Nürnberg Gerät. 21. According to P/W, the Nürnberg Gerät is fitted to Würzburg in order to eliminate the effects of "window". This apparatus has not been entirely successful, although it makes the operator's job slightly easier. "Würzburg Laus". 22. The "Würzburg Laus" is said to be an apparatus replacing the Nürnberg Gerät as a counter measure for "window". The apparatus in contained in a box 18 x 9 x 9 inches, which is attached to the Würzburg. 23. The "Laus" is a much more recent development, and is said to be somewhat more successful than the Nürnberg Gerät. Flanderzaun. 24. This is the colloquial name given to highly characteristic interference pattern on the screen of the Würzburg and Freya. The word is apparently associated with the barbed wire entanglements of Flanders in the last war, and this gives some indication of the picture which the interference makes. 25. P/W believed that this interference is a transmission apparently on the frequency on which Würzburg and Freya are operating, and same P/W have the idea that it emanates from the Isle of Wight vicinity. Köthen Gerät. 26. The "Köthen Gerät" is, according to P/W, not an apparatus but a frequency of the Freya. For example, particular frequencies on Freya are designated A, B, C and D, and Köthen is merely another frequency deriving its name from an experimental station at Köthen. 27. The A, B, C and D frequencies, P/W thinks, were produced by civil firms, and the Köthen name implies that this frequency is a development of the Luftwaffe's own experimental station at Köthen. "Limbach". 28. Amongst documents found at the Radar station at Douvres was a paper headed "Limbach"; this piece of apparatus was stated to be attached to the V.H.F. transmitter/receiver in the aircraft and to operate in conjunction with the Freya on the ground. 29. The paper stated that the procedure employed with this apparatus was similar to that of the Gemse - Erstlings procedure, but strangely enough was used in conjunction with the FuGe 7. 30. According to this P/W, the Limbach was superseded by the Gemse - Erstling (FuGe.25). 31. The document in question has been forwarded to A.D.I.(Sc). Rammstoss Gerät. 32. This is stated to be an instrument carried in German bombers, its purpose being to show the position of other aircraft and prevent collisions in tight formation. Rotterdam Gerät and Panorama Gerät. 33. It is stated that both these instruments, Allied in origin, are now being used by G.A.F. aircraft, but all P/W had heard was that the Panorama Gerät had a wide focus, whilst the Rotterdam Gerät was designed to show a small area. Diana. 34. At long last, after a lapse of 21/2 years, confirmation of "Diana" has come to light through documents. The first mention was from a notebook of a P/W of I/K.G.30 in August 1941 (A.D.I.(K) 420/1941), which stated that Diana was to be similar in principle to Elektra, but working on a short-wave band and within a frequency range of 3,000/6,000 kc/s. 35. The present document notes that "Diana" is similar to Elektra but operates on short waves. This P/W stated that "Diana" had not been operational. ORDER OF BATTLE - LN. REGIMENT 53. 36. The 53rd Ln. Regiment, to which the 8th Kompanie at Douvres belonged, consists of a number of Kompanien ranging from 1 to 26; The Kompanien are not necessarily numbered consecutively, so that the total in the 53rd Ln. Regiment may therefore be less than 26. All the Kompanien had code names. 37. The 53rd Ln. Regiment was responsible for an area bounded on one side by the coast, and on the other sides by a line running from the tip of the Cherbourg peninsula to the South of Paris and northwards to Dieppe. Its Kompanien lie all along the coast and towards the interior at a distance of 30/40 km. apart; each Kompanie's area overlaps so that the entire territory is completely covered. 38. The H.Q. of the 53rd Regiment is in Paris and is under the command of Oberstleutnant FLECH, with Major HOFFMANN as Deputy. 25th Kompanie. 39. The 25th Kompanie is the H.Q. Kompanie and has a strength of 20/25 men, who were engaged in visiting Freya and Würzburg sites of the Regiment and doing minor repairs. It was stated that these men were by no means skilled engineers, and knew nothing of the internal workings of the Freyas and Würzburgs. 8th Kompanie. 40. The 8th Kompanie at Douvres had a total strength of 160 men, who were divided as follows:- Kompanie Stab............ Administrative Staff. Zug 1 ) Zug 2 ) ................. Personnel manning the Freya and Würzburg on six-hour shifts day and night. Flak Zug................. Personnel manning and guarding Flak position round the Kompanie’s site. 41. Another Kompanie of this Regiment, the number of which was unknown to these present P/W, was said to be manning a site at St. Valery-en-Caux. MORALE. 42. Generally speaking, the morale of the 8th Kompanie during the pre-Invasion raids was high, and their resistance during the final attack on the station was certainly not suggestive of low morale. It is noteworthy, however, that since capture and the absence of the excitement of action, these P/W are heartily glad to be out of the war. The majority are convinced that Germany has already lost the war. SEE APPENDIX OVERLEAF. A.D.I.(K). S.D. Felkin, 30 June 1944 Wing Commander 1. The Deputy Commander of the 8th Kompanie at Douvres an Oberleutnant - was good enough to bring his paybook with him, and his career is therefore set out below as a matter of interest. Oct. 1937 – March 1938... Was with Ln. Abteilung R.L.M., 2nd. Komp. at Potsdam (This was, supposed to be one of the very elite schools for Signals in Germany before the war). March 1938 – April 1938.. Was with Ln. Abt. R.L.M. 2nd. Komp. in Vienna, and took part in the Anschluss. April 1938 - Aug. 1938... Back to the R.L.M. 2nd. Komp. at Potsdam. Aug. 1938 - Sept. 1939... Acted as Funker to Ln. Regt. 4, 7th Komp. in Vienna. Sept. 1939 - Feb. 1940... Became a Horchfunker with Ln. Regt. 4, 7th Komp. At Cracow. Feb. 1940 - March 1940... Was posted to the Ln. Officers' Training School at Halle. April 1940 - Aug. 1940... Joined Ln. Regt. 4, Abt. III as Staff Officer. Here he was in command of a Hörstelle. Aug. 1940 - April 1941... Became O.C. of Horchstelle (W.24) at Breslau. (P/W explained that all these Hörstellen are described in passon and paybook as Wetter Funkempfangstelle which is in fact only a cover name for Horchdienst). April 1941 – March 1942.. Was at the depot of Horchstelle (W.3) which is at Athens. Here his job was to listen in to English ground telegraphic messages which were coded and decoded. March 1942 - April 1942.. Posted to Nikolaiew in Russia as Staff Officer to III Abteilung Ln. Regt. 4. April 1942 - May 1943.... Served in Ln. Regt. 130, who were there in the South Russian sector in support of a Flak division. May 1943 - May 1944...... Became O.C. of the 11th Komp. Of Ln. Regt. 57 and later O.C. of the 7th Komp. Of the same Regiment then near Orleans. 2. In May 1944 he was posted to his present unit (Ln.53, 8th Komp.) as Second-in-Command to Hauptman EGLE. He says that it was intended that he should take over this Company in a very few weeks' time. Decorations: Erinnerungsmedaille for Austria. Erinnerungsmedaille for Sudetenland. K.V.K. Second Class with Swords. Rumanian Cross given to those who fought against Communism. Krimm Shield, which commemorates the battles of the Crimea, including Sebastopol and Kersch and last:- E.K.II.
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GERMAN KNOWNLEDGE OF 'OBOE'
SECRET A. D. I. (K) Report No. 318/1944
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W AS THE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED UNTIL COMMENTED ON AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. GERMAN KNOWNLEDGE OF 'OBOE'. 1. Attached is a translation of a paper issued by the General der Flakwaffe on 24th May 1944 concerning the British 'Oboe' procedure - called by the Germans the Boomerang. 2. Apart from showing that the enemy understands the working of 'Oboe' the report is of interest as it indicates the lines on which German defence was concentrating. Night-fighters are dismissed summarily and the main hope is that, by knowing the approach course, the height and the speed of the attacking aircraft, the Flak defences must be concentrated near the bomb release point so as to produce a "Vernichtungsfeuer" by which success was certain. The report also hints that, since the German knew the 'Oboe' frequencies, radio counter-measures were in hand. 3. One other point of interest is the high standard of the plots of aircraft attacking on the night of 2nd February 1944. This Sketch of is reproduced as Appendix II. 4. The original document has been passed to A.D.I.(Science). A.D.I.(K) S.D. FELKIN 29 June 44. Wing Commander TRANSLATION SECRET ("TOP SECRET") Oberkommando der Luftwaffe Bernau b/Berlin d.24.5.1944 Tel.: Berlin 56 40 76 App.:122 General der Flakwaffe Bernau 814 u.815 od.üb. (General der Flakausbildung) L.V. 12. Az. 79 m Nr.0236/44 g.Kdos.(A/C) Number of Copies: 250. Copy N°: 79. Subject: Combating "Boomerang" Aircraft. Attached are instructions for dealing with aircraft attacks using the Boomerang procedure. In view of the importance of defence against this new method of attack adopted by the enemy it is imperative that all units be instructed in the Boomerang procedure and that counter—measures are adopted on the lines laid down in the attached instruction. Subsequent observations and experiences are to be reported to the General in charge of A.A. defences. Distribution: All independent Flak Groups as well as interested sections of O.K.L., O.K.H., O.K.M., SS-Führungs-Hpt.-Amt, Höhere Kdre., Flakersatzdivision General der Jagdflieger, Generalnachrichtenführer, General d. Kampfflieger u. GL/Flaktechnisches Amt. (Sgd) v. Axthelm. Generalleutnant. TRANSLATION SECRET ("TOP SECRET") Encl. To: OKL – Gen.d.Flakwaffe (Gen.d.Flak-ausb.) Nr.0236/44 g.Kos. (A/C) Dated 24/May/44. A. General. Recently, nuisance raids have been developing more and more into high altitude precision attacks against pin-pointed targets (particularly important industrial complexes) by means of a special navigational procedure known as the "Boomerang" procedure. So far, "Boomerang" attacks have only taken place at night on the Rhine-Westphalian industrial area, Aachen and Osnabrück, airfields and railway stations, in the area of Luftgau Belgium/N. France, Paris and targets in Brittany. The "Boomerang" aircraft employed were Mosquitoes belong to 105 and 109 (B) squadrons, stationed at Marham. Immediately after take-off the aircraft climb to the prescribed attacking height of 8,000 to 11,000 metres, with a view to checking wind drift. The enemy is carrying out on an increasing scale his precision attacks and pathfinder technique using the "Boomerang" procedure. It is clear from the increase of activity that the enemy is constantly expanding his "Boomerang" organisation and improving the technique. An expansion of these attacks on further targets with ever increasing effect is the result. It is therefore essential to bring to bear everything in our power with a view to combating "Boomerang" aircraft. The basic principle is that aircraft must be shot down. B. The "Boomerang" procedure. The "Boomerang" procedure is the most accurate method of remote control at present known. It consists of controlling aircraft by means of Radar stations located in S., S.E. and E. England. These stations work together in pairs of which one is the main station, and passes navigational signals to the aircraft. One signal from this station indicates the course to the pilot whilst the other is for the bomb-aimer to release the bombs. (see App. 1). The aircraft to be controlled flies under its own control to an agreed point, where the remote control takes over. The aircraft is then directed by W/T to the turning point, which is on an arc centred on the Radar station in England and passing through the bomb dropping point. Constant corrections from the ground station in England keep the aircraft on its course (see App. 1) but in spite of the great accuracy of measurement deviations up to 300 metres are possible. The total time required for the target approach is 8 to 15 minutes. As soon as an aircraft passes over the target, the next one is taken over by control. The time interval between attacking aircraft is frequently reduced by attaching several uncontrolled aircraft to one controlled aircraft, or by using further pairs of Radar stations. The uncontrolled aircraft aim their bombes on ground or air markers. The approach to targets East of England is made from a N. - S., S. - N. or S. – W. direction. Targets South of England are approached W. - E. or E. - W. The course depends upon the relationship of the two Radar stations to one another. Unless there in a disturbance by a jamming station the final phase of the line of approach becomes an arc centred on the ground control station in England and passing through the objective to be attacked. It has been observed that simultaneous flights to different objectives on a N.- S., S.- N. as well as S.- W. and N.- E. courses, have been carried out, which proves that the enemy has already set up several ground stations. The range of this system is limited by the curvature of the earth and for a flight at a height of 9,000 metres, the range is between 400 – 450 km. The bombing accuracy depends on the reading and measuring accuracy of the ground station in England. The accuracy is within a square of approximately .5 km. by .5 km. So far, the followings types of "Boomerang" attacks have been made:- a) Single "Boomerang" aircraft. b) One "Boomerang" aircraft followed by 2-5 uncontrolled aircraft. c) "Boomerang" aircraft as Pathfinders for a following bomber force. d) "Boomerang" Pathfinders as decoy marker flaredroppers and "window" aircraft. (Translator's note: the German text is ambiguous. The word is "Scheinmarkierer" which may mean decoy or illuminating markers. The subsequent context suggests the former). The "Boomerang" Pathfinders at first saturate the approach and target area with "Window", then place light markers over the target. The bomber stream then follows up immediately on the "Boomerang" course. C. Counter-measures. The following take part in "anti-Boomerang" attacks: a) Night fighters. b) Radio jamming service c) Flak. I. Our own Mosquito night-fighters (sic) have not had any worth-while successes in shooting aircraft down prior to the bomb release or to the commencement of the Pathfinder activity. Over a period of time, however, night-fighters should be more successful, provided high flying aircraft are employed. Uncontrolled night-fighting with the aid of search lights is possible if our own fighters are high enough and in sufficient numbers in the waiting area over the Flak zone. Because of vapour trails, it is possible to pick out highflying aircraft by searchlights. II. The radio jamming service has appreciated the principles of the "Boomerang" system and has set up jamming stations. It is possible to force part of the approaching aircraft off the approach line by jamming. However, the enemy soon recognises the disturbance and can change over to a pre-arranged alternative frequency. The radio jamming service has already met with success, but is still limited in its effectiveness. III. The main burden of defence, now as before, rests with the Flack. For the successful execution of the "Boomerang" system conditions must be fulfilled:- 1. The attack must take place at a constant height of about 8,000 - 11,000 metres. 2. The target approach must follow a fixed course for several minutes. (Course for every objective known). 3. The ground speed must remain constant throughout the approach. (140 - 180 metres/s.) These known and partly constant target factors constitute a great weakness to the enemy. In addition the Mosquito, because of its wooden construction, is highly vulnerable to well-directed Flak. If, in spite of these favourable conditions, the Flak has only so far obtained little success, the fault lies in the increased factor of error when engaging targets at great heights, and also to the high speed of the Mosquito. On the other hand, the courses flown at the moment are well-known. This factor, together with the known target heights and target speed, enable the point of bomb release for each individual objective to be calculated accurately and in advance. These known facts, combined with the total fire-poor of all batteries within reach of the bomb-releasing area, should produce a successful "Vernichtungsfeuer" (annihilation fire) and prevent accurate bombing and lead to aircraft being shot down. D. Methods of Shooting. 1.) The shooting method employed on principal is annihilation fire. 2.) Provided that: a) The course is known, b) The target approach is fixed and confirmed by the Malsi Flak Calculating instrument. c) It is known with certainty that our own radio jamming does not result in the deviation of the enemy aircraft from its course and that the speed and height remain constant. This contradicts L.Dv.400/4b und VER-Flak 18 Ziff.11) 3.) If the precise plotting is difficult, the following measures are to be taken: a) The track is to be set in accordance with the known value. b) The ground speed is to be obtained and passed on by the Flak transmitter. In the absence of this data, action is to be taken on the basis of previous experience. (Translator's note: in other words, use your own brains). c) Height is to be obtained from accurately adjusted Radar and is to be passed over the Flak transmitter. 4.) With reference to the manner, in which "Boomerang" coursers are to be obtained for individual objectives, Commands will contact Luftgaukommando VI with a view to ascertaining the courses for their own particular area. E. Tactical Employment. Suitable steps must be taken in the event of a change in the direction of approach of "Boomerang" aircraft, and if possible one to two batteries (special Eis. batteries) will be brought into the probable direction of approach for immediate action. F. Counter-measures. The following is to be noted when combating "Boomerang" aircraft: 1.) Most accurate alignment of the respective batteries (adjustment of instruments and guns, calibration of direction-finding apparatus, re-checking of ballistic correction of the moment in order to eliminate the meteorological factor). 2.) Blocking together of the movement of target values: a) Set course for known value. b) Determine ground speed and height from previously emplaced batteries over Flak transmitter. 3.) As far as possible the Trupp should be provided with uniform ammunition (as few different batches as possible); calibration shoots should be carried out with this ammunition and muzzle velocity determinations with (?special) calibration ammunition should be avoided. 4.) Accurate meteorological reports must be obtained every two hours for heights up to 11,000 metres. These must be actual and not extrapolated. Contact must be made with the nearest airfield. 5.) Charge temperature should is periodically determined by means the two specially equipped cartridges (Messcartuschen) placed in the ammunition dump. 6.) The ammunition used for checking drill time should be carefully controlled and the error should be eliminated. 7.) Preliminary practices should be made along the known lines of approach by means of special fire control tables prepared for this purpose. Test shoots should be carried out using intervals of one second. (FAS I will supply fire control tables for "Boomerang"). 8.) All actual "Boomerang" courses should be charted on the Malsi plotting table as a check against the actual plots. (See Appendix II). A systematic research of shooting at great heights, having due regard to the available ammunition has been inaugurated. Results are to be expected shortly and until then all existing orders and instructions hold good. In order to keep counter measures apace with the enemy's intentions, it is essential to inform higher quarters of any new observations made during "Boomerang" attacks. The Luftgaukommando and Divisions are instructed to report regularly their experiences of "Boomerang" counter-measures to the General der Flakwaffe.
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Northern Convoy Routes
SECRET A. D. I. (K) Report No. 410/1945
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W AS THE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED UNTIL COMMENTED ON AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. G.A.F.SIGNALS INTELLIGENCE IN THE WAR — IX Norway and the Northern Convoy Routes. 1. In this series dealing with various aspects of the G.A.F. Signals Intelligence service in the war, it had been intended to conclude with the eighth report. Since the issue of the first report, however, another P/W has become available who had a comprehensive knowledge of signals activities in the Norwegian area throughout the war. It has therefore been found possible to add the present report, the ninth and final in the series. 2. The gradual expansion of signals intelligence based in Norway, and the Allied activities which it covered, are followed in this account from year to year from the time of the invasion of Norway onwards. In order that ready comparisons of the extent of that expansion may be made each year is dealt with separately, and maps showing the situation at various intervals during the war are appended. 1940. NUCLEUS OF THE ORGANISATION. 3. Soon after the invasion of Norway in May 1940, signals intelligence personnel from W-22 at Husum were formed into a new unit and sent to operate at Oslo. This new unit was named W—Leit 5 and, subordinated to the Höherer Nafü of Luftflotte 5, formed the nucleus of the projected signals intelligence service in Norway; its initial strength was that of a Trupp, but by the autumn was to be increased to a Zug (platoon). 4. The function of W—Leit 5 was to act as the central organisation in Norway for the comprehensive monitoring and evaluation of all enemy R/T and W/T traffic in the North Sea area, and the watching of R.A.F. Coastal Command operations against the West coast of Norway. Information was to be passed to the higher signals intelligence authorities in Germany, who in return fed WLeit 5 with such data on Bomber Command radio traffic as was of value to the Norwegian area. The unit did not itself undertake interception work, but confined its activity to organising the various intercept units and evaluating their results. 5. The first intercept unit, W-25, was set up at Trondheim, Skatval at the end of May with the strength of a Trupp, and also operated a H/F Adcock D/F set on Örlandet. This unit covered W/T traffic of 18 Group Coastal Command and W/T and R/T traffic from aircraft carriers, its intercept results being passed to W-Leit 5 at Oslo. 6. At the same time, W-25 was to make a local evaluation of its intercepted signals and pass the results to a specially appointed signals intelligence officer attached to Fliegerkorps X, so that the latter could amplify its air situation picture. Actually the greater part of the material passed by W-25 to the Fliegerkorps consisted of intercepts from reconnaissance aircraft of 18 Group. 7. At the end of August, W-25 was moved from Skatval to Stavanger, partly owing to the concentration of 18 Group's attention to that part of Norway and partly in order to be near Fliegerkorps X headquarters, which had meanwhile moved to Stavanger. 8. At the beginning of July another intercept Kompanie, 9/Ln. Regt. 2, had moved into Norway and had been put into operation at Naerland, near Stavanger. This unit employed an Adcock D/F station, whilst rhomboid intercept installations were planned and partly constructed during the latter part of the summer. 9. 9/Ln. Regt. 2 was to intercept the W/T traffic of 15 and 18 Groups and the H.F. R/T traffic of the fighters operating in the North of the U.K.; parallel with W-25 at Stavanger, this unit was to pass its intercept results to W-Leit 5 at Oslo and at the same time to make a local evaluation for the benefit of Fliegerkorps X. 10. In October the Signals Intelligence service in Norway began to take shape with the formation of an Abteilung, III/Ln. Regt. 5, subordinated to the Höhere Nafü of Luftflotte 5 both operationally and in its organisation. In December, 9/Ln. Regt. 2 at Naerland was renamed 9/Ln. Regt. 5. 11. The listening chain was completed by the subordination of W-22 at Husum (Schleswig Holstein) to III/Ln. Regt. 5. The duties of W-22 were essentially the same as those of W-25 and 9/Ln. Regt. 5, namely to feed W-Leit 5 with the results of its observations. 12. Owing to the lack of adequate D/F equipment in Norway at this time, and in order to ensure a full cover of Coastal Command operations, Husum also had to monitor 15 and 18 Group traffic. In addition, it shared with 9/Ln. Regt. 5 the task of covering the schools and ground networks of Coastal Command. 13. Once the full interception equipment of 9/Ln. Regt. 5 had come into operation at Naerland, W-Leit 5 was able to fulfil its primary tasks of controlling the coverage of the intercept station, evaluating the intercept results collected from the outstations by teleprinter tie-lines and distributing the resulting intelligence to all interested commands and units. 14. A situation report compiled from current messages and documents was produced each day, and every fourteen days a consolidated report was issued containing the more long term intelligence on strength and locations of enemy units, types of aircraft and tactics, and the identities of units being employed on specific operations. 15. Thus, from the late summer of 1940 onwards, intercepts of great value to G.A.F. reconnaissance units were regularly passed to the Operations Staff of Luftflotte 5. All important intelligence was immediately sent to Abteilung I of O.K.L. INTERCEPT ACTIVITIES. 16. Observation of 15 Group radio traffic was essential for providing the G.A.F. reconnaissance and coastal units with a picture of the air situation in that Group's sphere of operations. The watch on 18 Group by W-25 and 9/Ln. Regt 5 aimed at keeping a check on its strength and dispositions. 17. The H.F. R/T traffic of R.A.F. fighters based in the northern U.K. produced intelligence on defence tactics, organisation, strength and dispositions. This particular listening activity was supplemented by the D-Funker (interpreter radio operators), carried in aircraft of the long-range reconnaissance units for the purpose of evading attack by Allied fighters. When in April 1941, R.A.F. fighters converted to V.H.F. this practice was discontinued. In the late autumn of 1940 the 0.T.U.'s in Scotland and the Midlands were also covered. 18. Beacons in Scotland and the Midlands were covered by 9/Ln. Regt. 5 at Naerland from 1940 until the end of 1943. This work was controlled partly by W-10 (later the Leitstelle der Funkaufklärung) in Germany and partly by the Höherer Nafü of Luftflotte 5 for the benefit of G.A.F. units operating from Norway. The Kompanie supplied such information as it had collected on location, recognition signals, signals strength and method of operation of the beacons, and was frequently called upon by Luftflotte 5 to suggest uses to which such beacons could be put for the benefit of the G.A.F. 19. Meteorological traffic was also covered by 9/Ln. Regt. 5, and intercepted messages were passed to the interested G.A.F. Met. stations in the Norwegian theatre and to W-22 at Husum for further distribution amongst stations in Germany. 20. Responsibility for breaking the Syko messages of Coastal Command reconnaissance aircraft lay with W-22 at Husum, and for this purpose traffic of 16 and 19 Groups and other networks were also intercepted in order to increase cryptographic depth. This traffic could not be broken with sufficient speed to be of tactical value, but it provided long-term intelligence on types, squadrons, dispositions, operational methods, distress signals and accidents. Results were forwarded in collated form to interested units on day plus one. 21. In the succeeding years W-22 was called upon to an increasing extent to cover various R.A.F. and U.S.A.A.F. formations. The breaking of other types of codes and cyphers was undertaken centrally by W-10. 1941. EXPANSION OF SIGNALS INTELLIGENT. 22. In April 1941 R.A.F. fighter units in the North of England discontinued the use of H.F. R/T and converted to V.H.F., thus robbing German signals intelligence of a fruitful source of intelligence. From early summer, therefore, arrangements were made to experiment on the West coast of Norway with V.H.F. receivers and various types of aerial arrays; in the autumn V.H.F. experimental flights were carried out in the direction of the East Coast of Scotland with an aircraft specially provided by O.K.L., but results were disappointing. 23. By the summer, intercept equipment in use in Norway comprised 1 L.F. and 3 H.F. Adcocks as well as 5 interceptrhomboid installations. The function of the latter was to D/F ground transmissions with low signal strength, as well as the traffic of 15 or 18 Group aircraft operating at extreme ranges from the intercept stations. 24. The three H.F. Adcock stations were employed respectively for 15 Group, 18 Group and other radio traffic from unknown ground stations; the L.F. Adcock covered Coastal Command reconnaissance traffic, beacons and all other traffic from unknown ground stations. 25. In the autumn another radio interception Trupp, Wo-Hammerfest, commenced operations. This unit was to test reception conditions in northern latitudes for the purpose of covering bases in Iceland and the traffic of Allied long-range reconnaissance aircraft. The unit met with many difficulties, amongst which were the extreme remoteness of the unit and consequently poor communications and 1ack of D/F equipment. Reception conditions proved unreliable on account of atmospherics. By the end of 1941 no solid results had been achieved. 26. In the meantime the organisation of signal intelligence in Norway was being developed. A signals intelligence officer was attached to the operations staff of Luftflotte 5; by the end of the year all signals intelligence units in Norway were subordinated to the Höherer Nafü Luftflotte 5, and all came under the administrative command of Ln. Regt. 5. 27. During this year the channels of communication of W-Leit 5 at Oslo were improved and at the close of the year comprised teleprinter lines to Berlin, Husum, Naerland, the G.A.F. exchange at Oslo and between Naerland and Husum. Direct telephone lines were also installed to Luftgau Norway and the Naval Command at Oslo. 1942. D/F BASE ATLANTIC. 28. The most notable development in signals intelligence in Norway during 1942 was the establishment in the summer and the preliminary organisation of a chain of intercept stations, known as D/F Base Atlantic, for the covering of Atlantic signals traffic. This chain was to comprise stations at Bodö, Örlandet, Naerland, Husum (Germany) and Brest, with Naerland as the central point. 29. The D/F Base Atlantic did not begin operations as an entity until the early summer of 1943, but its main functions were to supply an increased number of plots on 15 Group aircraft on convoy escort, end to watch the anti U-boat flying boats. V.H.F. TRAFFIC. 30. The experiments in V.H.F. interception begun during 1941 were continued but with little success. Various types of antennae were tried at different locations, and the special aircraft continued spasmodic flights towards the East Coast of Scotland, mainly to test antennae and to check up on new kinds of transmissions. CONVOY TRAFFIC. 31. During the autumn it was decided that the interception Trupp, Wo-Hammerfest, was serving no useful purpose. 32. The interception Trupp established at Hammerfest during 1941 had supplied useful data on reception conditions in Northern Norway, but as far as operational results were concerned, no useful purpose was being served and the unit was withdrawn. Shortly afterwards, however, another similar unit began to operate at Svanvik. 33. Conditions for operation at Svanvik were found to be more favourable than at Hammerfest, besides which, the former station was provided with a D/F Adcock, and during the autumn the Trupp was busy with traffic from the two Allied convoys, P.Q.18 and 19. 34. From this traffic two main facts were elicited. The first was that some of the flying boats had transferred from Sollum Voe to Murmansk, whence they were flying anti U-Boat patrols. The second new fact was that the R/T traffic from land-based or escort carrier fighters could be intercepted and D/F'd.; in this way additional data to those from normal reconnaissance sources could be supplied to supplement the air situation picture. 35. Signals intelligence was particularly valuable in providing security to German naval forces passing along the Norwegian coasts. CHANGES IN ORGANISATION. 36. In the autumn another intercept Kompanie, the 8th, was added to III/Ln. Regt. 5. 37. Training of its new personnel began towards the end of the year, and its eventual duties were to man the D/F Base Atlantic in Norway, to monitor Allied North Sea convoys and to watch for new British and Russian traffic on the northern front. 38. At the end of the year W-Leit 5 at Oslo was renamed 14/Ln. Regt. 5, whilst W-22 at Husum became 15/Ln. Regt. 2. 39. Communications facilities of 14/Ln. Regt. 5 were further increased during 1942, and at the end of the year consisted of the following:- 1 Teleprinter line to Gefechtsstab of Luftflotten Kdo. 5. 1 Teleprinter line to G.A.F. exchange, Oslo. 1 Teleprinter line to Naerland. 1 Teleprinter line to Husum. 1 Teleprinter line to Berlin. 1 Teleprinter line from Naerland to Husum. 1 Telephone line to G.A.F. exchange, Oslo. 1 Telephone line to Ln. Regt. 5. 40. The teleprinter line between Naerland and Husum which had been established in 1941 was used on occasions for D/F squad traffic, but as the same line had to be used for all other purposes this was not entirely satisfactory. 1943. 8/LN. REGT. 5. 41. The training and expansion of 8/Ln. Regt. 5 continued until the spring, when the 3rd Zug was ready for operations and was sent to Svanvik. Two D/F Adcocks were constructed so that both East and West D/F'ing could he carried on simultaneously. 42. An advance Trupp of the 8th Kompanie was sent to investigate the terrain in the Alta-Bardufoss area with a view of determining a final position for intercept operations. Bardufoss was found suitable so far as convenience and communications were concerned, and two Züge of the Kompanie soon followed. 43. Intercept Trupps of 8/Ln. Regt. 5, with D/F sets at Svanvik, Bodö and Örlandet, were put to covering all Allied W/T and R/T traffic in the North Sea and from Iceland Base and North Sea convoys. The Kompanie was also commissioned by W-10 to intercept all U.S. traffic, the results of which were to be transmitted to W-10 direct and without preliminary evaluation. 44. At times the Kompanie produced excellent results, especially in the interception of unknown U.S. traffic, but operations in general suffered from frequent atmospheric disturbances and a lack of any results which had value for immediate operations. 45. The Zug at Svanvik enjoyed far more favourable conditions than the unit at Bardufoss; besides the valuable work which it performed in following North Sea convoys it investigated radio conditions in the northern area. Its assistance and advice were sought for important tactical operations in the area. D/F BASE ATLANTIC. 46. As already stated, the main function of the D/F Base Atlantic was to D/F or plot aircraft of 15 and 18 Groups, with a secondary function of D/F'ing unknown radio stations. 47. Inadequate communications between Oslo and Brest, however, made the immediate use of the information from Brest impossible, its only advantage being in its value for subsequent confirmation. 48. On the whole, the Base proved its worth as it supplied Fliegerführer Atlantik and B.d.U. with regular intelligence on strength, tactics and area of operation of convey escorts and of the aircraft of 15 Group, besides, providing B.d.U. with data which often led to successful U-boat attacks. 49. During the year the communication facilities of the Örlandet, Bodö and Svanvik D/F sites remained unsatisfactory, but nevertheless they contrived to make valuable contributions to the intelligence picture. ANGLO-SWEDISH COURRIER SERVICE. 50. In the course of the year an intercept cover was put on the Anglo-Swedish courier service, and the monitoring was developed to such an extent that daily reports on numbers of aircraft operating, bases and, towards the end of the following year, the squadron strength. TRANSATLANTIC FERRY SERVICE. 51. In the spring, W-10 ordered Husum to undertake the interception of all Allied transatlantic ferry traffic in the North and East Atlantic; the results were to be evaluated by 14/Ln. Regt. 5 at Oslo. The object was to establish the approximate daily figures of aircraft ferried, their density on the various stretches of the outward and return flights, and the types of aircraft employed for varying purposes. 52. Results were teleprinted daily and also distributed in monthly reports. SYKO AND A.R.C. MESSAGES. 53. The breaking of Syko messages was carried out by 15/Ln. Regt. 2 at Husum until Syko was dropped in the middle of 1943. When A.R.C. was introduced considerable initial difficulties were encountered, but by the end of the year some measure of success was achieved and was further increased during 1944. These results were used strategically but never tactically. IMPROVEMENTS IN COMMUNICATIONS. 54. In the course of the year the Kompanien at Oslo, Naerland and Bardufoss were equipped with transmitters in case of breakdown in landline communication. 15/Ln. Regt. 2 became the relay station for the re-transmission of messages to superior and related signals intelligence units in the Reich. 1944. RE-ORGANISATION. 55. The year saw considerable changes in the G.A.F. SignalsIntelligence service as a whole in its attempt to create a homogeneousorganisation. The units in Norway brought into the scheme were renamedas follows:- 14/Ln. Regt. 5 became 1/Ln. Abt. 355. 8/Ln. Regt. 5 became 2/Ln. Abt. 355. 9/Ln. Regt. 5 became 3/Ln. Abt. 355. 15/Ln. Regt. 2 became 5/Ln. Abt. 357. 56. At the same time W-10, the controlling station in the Reich, was renamed Leitstelle der Funkaufklärung. 57. As an anti-invasion measure a mobile listening Zug was created, consisting of a contingent of W/T and R/T operators and evaluators. The unit was responsible to the Fliegerführer and was to be ready to operate at the focal point of an invasion attempt. MOVEMENTS OF UNITS. 58. The intercept station set up during 1943 at Bardufoss and manned by 8/Ln. Regt. 5 (2/Ln. Abt. 355) had shown only partially satisfactory results due to bad reception conditions. The changing war situation made the station redundant as the unit at Svanvik was sufficient for the Northern area so that in the spring the Bardufoss station was moved to Halden. 59. At the same time 15/Ln. Regt. 2 (5/Ln. Abt. 357) was becoming monopolised by the Leitstelle der Funkaufklärung for duties in defence of the Reich, and consequently became of less value to signals intelligence in Norway. 60. After the Allied invasion in France the D/F Base Atlantic suffered the loss of its left wing at Brest and then the loss of the Svanvik base through the evacuation of Northern Norway. In the course of 1944 the entire strategic evaluation of Coastal Command traffic was taken over by the evaluation Kompanie of the Leitstelle der Funkaufklärung which was supplied with intercept data by 5/357 at Husum. V.H.F. AND H.F. INTERCEPTION. 61. The experiments which had been made during 1941 and 1942 with the object of intercepting Allied V.H.F. traffic were finally abandoned in 1944, although the increasing weight of 16 and 18 Group attacks made the use of V.H.F. receivers on the West coast more necessary than ever. 62. Changes which took place in the W/T traffic of 18 Group during 1944 caused some difficulties to the Germans, but on the other hand the combined use of R/T and W/T by Allied forces approaching the Norwegian coasts restored the possibility of obtaining vital intelligence. 63. In such cases as the latter, the W/T intercepts could not be used for direct fighter control but a running commentary on events could be passed to the fighter control officer, detailing direction, probable intentions, tactics and strength. 64. During the year, 2/Ln. Abt. 355 at Halden was engaged in such tasks as covering U.S. W/T traffic and R.A.F. Bomber Command tactics for the benefit of O.K.L. W/T traffic of T.A.F. aircraft was also covered for practice, and 16 Group was intercepted when it operated against the South Coast of Norway. The Kompanie later covered training and part of the coastal network, as well as D/F’ing minelaying and supply dropping activity in the Norwegian area. 65. After the re-organisation of the G.A.F. signals service early in 1944, the radio command stations (Funkbefehlsstellen) established at the divisional and sector reporting centres for the use of the radio observation and jamming services were also used by the Signals Intelligence units for the relaying of messages to higher authorities. At the same time efforts were made to develop the tactical evaluation organisation to the utmost; to that end a close co-operation with radio observation (Fu.m.B.), aircraft reporting and jamming services was achieved. 66. The monitoring of fighter O.T.U.'s in the U.K., which had continued since 1940, came to an end in the spring of 1944 when those units converted to V.H.F. At the same time a fuller cover was put on long range reconnaissance training traffic which was closely connected with the increasingly important North Sea convoy traffic. 67. The latter traffic provided intelligence on tactics, state of development, strength in carrier aircraft and the nature of carrier manoeuvres. To deal with the increase in this convoy traffic a liaison officer was attached to Fliegerführer 5 at Bardufoss and an R/T intercept Trupp was established at Tromsö; R/T operators had already been posted to the D/F squads established at Bodö and Örlandet for the purpose of intercepting R/T traffic of carrier aircraft. 1945. D/F SQUAD TRAFFIC. 68. The radio D/F squad traffic (Funk-Peilkommandoverkehr) instituted at the beginning of the year proved more and more important for assisting the evaluation of 18 Group and Northern convoy traffic and produced invaluable results. An H/F Adcock was set up at Jessheim to supplement the Halden Kompanie's efforts in monitoring Allied Air operations in the Skagerrak, Kattegat and Oslo Fjord and act as alternative D/F base to that at Naerland. A.D.I.(K) and S. D. Felkin U.S. Air Interrogation. Group Captain. 14th November 1945.
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German countermeasures against allied radar jamming
SECRET A. D. I. (K) Report No. 356/1944
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W AS THE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED UNTIL COMMENTED ON AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. GERMAN COUNTERMEASURES AGAINST ALLIED RADAR JAMMING. 1. The following information, which is believed to be fully reliable, has been obtained in the main from a P/W who had been in charge of Flak Würzburg positions on the Cherbourg Peninsula. 2. Interrogation has been carried out in co-operation with A.D.I.(Sc), but this report deals only with the general principals involved, technical details of circuits and instruments having been passed to A.D.I.(Sc). 3. Ever since the summer of 1942, the Germans have been alive to the possibility of electrical jamming of ground radar, and have had countermeasures under consideration. In the autumn of 1942, amongst other measures, instructions were issued to units using the Würzburg-D to remove the revolving dipole if electrical jamming were encountered, and to replace it with the fixed type dipole aerial from the Würzburg-A. 4. In January or February 1943, instructions were issued which stated categorically that electrical jamming was expected shortly to begin, and detailing countermeasures called by the code names "Stendal A" and "Stendal B", the latter employing a modification to the set known as "Goldammer"; these proved reasonably satisfactory. 5. The use of "Window" took the Germans completely by surprise and was at first almost 100% effective. No countermeasures were available and entire Flak batteries were put out of action. At first the Radar operators were told that they must somehow learn to distinguish the bomber formations from the "Window" reflections, but in practice it was found that only the most experienced operators were able to do this, and then only occasionally. 6. Countermeasures were evolved and introduced fairly quickly, and these are detailed below. All Würzburg instruments in the Cherbourg Peninsula are stated to have been equipped with the necessary modifications at the time of the invasion. 7. The German authorities maintain that these countermeasures are 80% effective, but the present P/W considers that 50% would be a more accurate figure, since one or other of the special modifications to the Würzburg is frequently used. Another point mentioned was that even these special modifications were apt to fail, or at least to prove unsatisfactory, if "Window" was used in very large quantities. 8. Since the introduction of these new countermeasures, the Stendal procedures have become obsolete and are no longer used. NÜRNBERG PROCEDURE. 9. The Nürnberg procedure is a countermeasure against "Window” invented by Stabsingr. HOFFMANN of Flak Artillerie Schule III at Heiligensee. 10. With this procedure, the Würzburg is modified so that variations of signal strength due to rotation of the enemy aircraft's propellers make a note which is audible in the headphone, thus enabling the operators to distinguish between the aircraft and “Window". 11. An improved version of Nürnberg, known as Nürnberg 7, which is less fatiguing to the operators, has also been developed. WÜRZLAUS PROCEDURE 12. This enabled operators to distinguish between fast and slow moving echoes, and so permits differentiation between aircraft and "Window" or permanent echoes. 13. The blip on the Cathode ray tube appears as a blob of light resembling a louse, extending over both sides of the time-base. NOTE:- Captured wax stencils of the original German instructions for the use of the Nürnberg and Würzlaus procedures were received from Normandy after the above interrogation had been completed, and fully confirm P/W’s statements. The stencils have been rolled off, and copies are being sent as an Appendix to this report to A.D.I.(Sc), and to the other departments marked with a star on the distribution. TAUNUS PROCEDURE. 14. This countermeasure to "Window", is achieved by a modification which operates by virtue of the sharper wave front obtained from a true target blip compared with the more gentle sloping of a "Window" blip. P/W stated that this procedure was used in conjunction with Nürnberg and Würzlaus, but was unable to give full details. He claims that Taunus is also effective against jamming by means of noise modulators. FAKIR. 15. Fakir is the term applied when the split presentation both on the bearing and elevation tubes is made to appear on two separate traces placed opposite to each other and nearly a centimetre apart, as shown in the sketch below. 16. This double trace presentation was usual with Würzlaus before the introduction of Taunus; with the introduction of the latter, the use of Fakir has become essential if clear readings are to be obtained on the cathode ray tube. Normal bearing "Fakir" bearing Presentation with presentation with Würzlaus Würzlaus WISMAR PROCEDURE. 17. The Wismar procedure is a counter to electrical jamming, achieved by means of a change of wavelength. 18. For purposes of this procedure the original Würzburg frequency, which this P/W believed to be 600 Mc/s., was separated into two or three bands, each comprising three separate frequencies as follows:- Frequency Al - 3 Mc/s. above A4. Frequency A4 - Original frequency, Frequency A7 - 3 Mc/s. below A4. A second frequency band, Bl, B4 and B7, was also employed, in which B4 was 30 Mc/s. below A4, and B1 and B7 were respectively 3 Mc/s. higher and lower than B4. 19. It was intended that there should be third band "C" below the "B" band, but this has not yet been introduced, as existing transmitters cannot operate so far below the original frequency. 20. A new local oscillator, known as the "Michael Local Oscillator", which is easily tuneable, has been introduced for the Wismar procedure, and nearly all Würzburg-D in the Cherbourg area were equipped with this. WESTERWALD. 21. A captured document, which has been handed to A.D.I.(Sc), gives details of an anti-jamming device known as "Westerwald", which is applicable to Freya and coast-watcher equipment. 22. In effect, this adapts the Taunus technique as used on the Würzburg to Freya and coast-watcher. Westerwald is the name of the mountainous country in Germany just north of the Taunus region. FuGe 25. 23. P/W states, that the Würzburg attachments intended for the FuGe 25 (I.F.F.) procedure have not been fitted for a long time, and that more recently the frames for these have also been removed in the Cherbourg area. He states that the FuGe 25 was formerly called by the code name "ZWILLING". MAINZ AND MANNHEIM. 24. These apparatus, which are developments of the Würzburg, have been reported in A.D.I.(K) 12/1944, paras.18-26, and A.D.I.(K) 141A/1944, paras.24-25. The present P/W refers to them under the numbers 40 and 41 respectively. He states, however, that they are complicated and very expensive, and have hardly been brought into use. A.D.I.(K) S.D. Felkin 16th July, 1944 Wing Commander Anlage 4. Gegenmaßnahmen bei Störung der Funkmessgeräte (Flak) Im Fall von Feindstörung der Funkmessgeräte (Flak) sind sofort je nach Art der Störung die Gegenmaßnahmen: "Wismar" Gemäss L.Dv. 400/30 "Standal" Teil I ‐ IV "Goldammer" "Nürnberg" und "Würzlaus" einzuleiten. Bis zum Erscheinen der Vorschriften "Nürnberg" und "Würzlaus" sind diese beiden Verfahren wie folgt anzuwenden: I. Nürnberg A. Begriffsbestimmung Der Sonderbetrieb "Nürnberg" ermöglicht das Suchen und Auffassen von Flugzielen durch Funkmessgerät (Flak) 39 T bei Störung durch Folienabwurf. Das Verfahren beruht darauf, dass die von einem Flugziel reflektierte Energie periodischen Schwankungen unterworfen ist. Diese erzeugen in den Kopfhörern eines Hörzusatzes einen Brummton von 50 ‐ 150 Hz. Die von Folien reflektierte Energie ist unregelmäßigen Schwankungen unterworfen. Diese erzeugen in dem Hörzusatz ein zischendes und fauchendes Geräusch, das sich von dem Brummton der periodischen Schwankungen deutlich unterscheidet. Der Brummton eines Flugzeuges ist nur dann hörbar, wenn das Flugzeug entfernungs‐und winkelmässig ungefähr angemessen ist. Bei genauer Ortung ist der Ton am lautesten (Maximum). Des Verfahren "Nürnberg" ermöglicht also eine akustische Ortung, wenn die gestörten Entfernungsbereiche auf dem Übersichts‐ und Entfernungsfeinmessrohr ein Zielzeichen nicht oder nur undeutlich erkennen lassen. B. Geräte teile und Arbeitsweise des Sonderbetriebes "Nürnberg" Der Hörzusatz "Nürnberg" ist in die D‐Stufe des Richtgerätes eingebaut. Die auf "Nürnberg" umgerüsteten Bausteine tragen auf der Vorderseite ein "N". Auf der Vorderseite des Richtgerätes sind 3 Anschlussbuchsenpaare für die Kopfhörer des B 1, B 2 und B 3 angebracht. Der Sonderzusatz "Nürnberg" ist bei Schalterstellung E + S immer betriebsbereit. Eine Überprüfung der Betriebsbereitschaft ist möglich durch den Tastknopf in der B‐Stufe des Richtgerätes. Das Suchen des Flugziels hat bei stehendem Dipol zu erfolgen, weil der umlaufende Dipol im Hörzusatz ein Geräusch erzeugt, das die Feststellung des Tonmaximums erschwert. Sind nach der akustischen Ortung Zielzeichen auf dem Übersichts‐und Entfernungsmessrohr festzustellen, dann kann der UmlaufdipoI wieder eingeschaltet werden. Blatt 2 zu Anlage 4 In diesem Fall kann die Winkelmessung durch "Sonderbetrieb Winkelmessung" und die Entfernungsmessung durch "Sonderbetrieb Entfernungsmessung" erfolgen. Das Peilverfahren dient lediglich als Hilfsmittel zum Suchen und Auffassen von Flugzielen, ist jedoch zur Ermittlung von Schiessunterlagen nicht geeignet. Eine Erschwerung tritt ferner dadurch ein, das benachbarte Funkmessgeräte (Flak), (vornehmlich Funkmessgeräte (Flak) 41 T) ein starkes Knarren im Hörzusatz erzeugen, wodurch die Hörkennung von Flugzielen erschwert bzw. unmöglich gemacht werden kann. C. Bedienungsanleitung für Senderbetrieb "Nürnberg“. 1.) Überprüfung des Hörzusatzes „Nürnberg“ B 2 legt den Kopfhörer um, schaltet den Umlaufdipol aus und stellt den Drehknopf "Pot" auf "Null". B 1 stellt den Dunkelpunkt auf eine festzeichenfreie Stelle des Entfernungsbereiches. B 2 dreht an der oberen Schlitzschraube in der D‐Stufe solange nach rechts, bis er ein knatterndes Geräusch hört, dreht dann die Schraube, so weit nach links, bis dieser Ton gerade verschwindet. Drückt auf den Tastknopf auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes und ruft, wenn er im Kopfhörer, einen tiefen Brummton hört: "Hörzusatz betriebsbereit! " 2.) Exerzierordnung für die gefechtsmäßige Anwendung des Sonderbetriebes "Nürnberg" Flugziele im Störzeichenbereich nicht feststellbar. Sind Zielzeichen auf den Braunschen Röhren nicht feststellbar, so sind die Winkel ‐und e‐Messung allein nach dem Gehör durchzuführen. Es werden dabei alle drei Werte nach dem akustischen Maximum ermittelt. B 2 ruft bei Auftreten eines Störzeichenbereiches aus: "Feindstörung durch Folien!" Kann er kein Zeichen im Störbereich des Übersichtsrohres erkenne, ruft er nun: "Auffassen nicht möglich!" M.F. befiehlt. "Hörzusatz! " B1 B2 legen Kopfhörer um. B3 B1 dreht am e‐Grobtrieb die Entfernung des Störzeichenbereiches langsam durch, beobachtet die Störzeichen und achtet auf den Ton im Kopfhörer. Hört er neben zischenden und fauchenden Geräusch einen tiefen Brummton, so bringt er diesen am e‐Feintrieb auf in Maximum. Blatt 3 zu Anlage 4 B 2 betätigt gleichzeitig das Höhenrichthandrad und bringt durch Peilen den im Kopfhörer hörbaren Brummton auf größte Lautstärke. Dadurch ist das Ziel grob geortet (Messfehler bei feststehendem Dipol; zur Verwendung als Schiessunterlage nicht geeignet).‐ Das Flugzielzeichen ist noch in dem Störzeichenbereich erkennbar. Der Hörzusatz dient in diesem Fall lediglich als akustisches Hilfsmittel zum eindeutigen Erkennen des Flugziels. Ist dies möglich, kann mit Hilfe des "Sonderbetriebes Winkelmessung“ weitergearbeitet werden. Ist auf Grund der akustischen Ortung auf dem Übersichts‐und e‐Feinmessrohr als Zielzeichen erkannt, rufen B 1 und B2 aus: "Ziel erkannt" M.F. befielt: "Sonderbetrieb Winkelmessung! " B2 schaltet den Umlaufdipol wieder ein. B1 hält das erkannte Zielzeichen auf dem Dunkelpunkt. B2 und B3 messen gemäß "Sonderbetrieb Winkelmessung". Verschwindet das Zielzeichen auf den Röhren kurzzeitig, so führen B1 und B2 bei umlaufendem Dipol das Ziel akustisch weiter bis das Zielzeichen wieder sichtbar ist. II. "Würzlaus". A. Begriffsbestimmung und Erscheinungsform. Das Verfahren "Würzlaus" dient zum Auffassen und Anmessen eines Flugzieles bei Feindstörungen durch Abwurf von Folien. Das Verfahren "Würzlaus" ermöglicht die bildliche Unterscheidung der reflektierten Energie eines sich bewegenden Zieles (Flugzeug) und eines festen Zieles (Düppelwolke). Durch Verwendung eines eingebauten zusätzlichen Hilfssenders wird erreicht, dass sich das Zielzeichen durch eine besondere Formgebung von den Störzeichen unterscheidet. Festzeichen und Metallfolien geben bei Sonderbetrieb "Würzlaus" auf dem Übersichtsrohr sich schlängelnde Zeichen. Die Zielzeichen von einem sich schnell bewegenden Flugziel erscheinen als eiförmige ausgefüllte Zeichen (sogenannte Würzlaus). Auf den Richtrohren erscheinen nach Umschalten auf "Würzlaus" zwei Lichtstriche, auf denen die Ablenk‐und Störzeichen kehrbildlich einander gegenüber stehen. Ein Zielzeichen ist dann genau angerichtet, wenn die beiden, einander gegenüberstehenden Flugzielzeichen (Würzlaus) gleich groß sind. Auf dem e‐Feinmessrohr erscheinen ebenfalls 2 Lichtstriche, aber die Stör‐und Zielzeichen kommen nur auf dem oberen Lichtstrich zur Anzeige. Das Ziel ist dann genau angemessen, wenn der Dunkelpunkt die "Würzlaus" halbiert. Blatt 4 zu Anlage 4 B. Geräteteile zur Bedienung des Sonderbetriebes "Würzlaus". Zum Sonderbetrieb "Würzlaus" sind folgende Geräte und Geräteteile am Funkmessgerät erforderlich: 1.) ein Hilfssender H.S. 62/65 "Michael" (am Ausleger links neben dem Richtsitz) mit Bedienungsknopf "Ankopplung" und Bedienungsknopf "Abstimmung", 2.) ein H.F.‐Kabel vom Hilfssender zum Senderüberlagerer (führt durch den Ausleger in den Sendeempfangsgeräteschrank und ist mit dem H.F.‐Stecker in den Senderüberlagerer eingeführt), 3.)Drehknopf zum Ein‐und Ausschalten der Kehrbildanzeige auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes (Mittelteil), 4.) Schlitzschraube (K) zum Nachjustieren des Kreisdurchmessers auf dem Übersichtsrohr auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes (Mittelteil), 5.)Senderüberlagerer, die für den Sendebetrieb "Würzlaus" ausgerüstet sind, tragen ein "W" auf der Frontplatte. C. Bedienungsanleitung für Sonderbetrieb "Würzlaus" a. Herstellen der Messbereitschaft. Allgemeines: Das Funkmessgerät 39 T(D) wird nach der L.Dv. 400/8a eingeschaltet und abgestimmt. Mit dem Einschalten des Funkmessgerätes (Flak) ist auch der Hilfssender eingeschaltet. Die Justierung des Dunkelpunktes auf dem Übersichtsrohr entfällt. Die Schraube "Dunkelpunkt" bewirkt lediglich nur eine Verschiebung der Ablenkzeichen auf den Bildröhren. "Abstimmen des Hilfssenders". B1 B2 messen Standziel genau an B3 B2 schaltet Kernbildanzeige ein durch Umlegen des Schaltknopfes im Mittelteil auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes von "N" auf "S"; überzeugt sich, daß Bedienungsknopf "Ankopplung" auf Linksanschlag steht regelt Sprühen auf dem Übersichtsrohr auf 2 mm durch Drehknopf "Pot" (Stellung 2 ‐ 3). dreht Bedienungsknopf "Ankopplung" auf Rechtsanschlag stellt Lichtstriche auf dem Seitenrichtrohr (gleichzeitig Höhenrichtrohr) auf größten Abstand durch Drehen am Bedienungsknopf "Abstimmung" am Hilfssender. Blatt 5 zu Anlage 4 Noch B2 bringt Lichtstriche auf 1,5 cm Abstand durch Linksdrehen des Bedienungsknopfes "Ankopplung" justiert Durchmesser des Lichtkreises auf dem Übersichtsrohr nach durch Drehen der Schlitzschraube im Mittelteil auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes. Hilfssender ist abgestimmt, wenn Festzeichen als sauberer Schlängel auf den Richtröhren erscheint. B 2 meldet: "Hilfssender abgestimmt". schaltet wieder auf "Normalbetrieb" durch Umlegen des Schaltknopfes im Mittelteil auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes von "S" auf "N". schaltet Sonderbetrieb "Würzlaus" aus durch Drehen des Bedienungsknopfes "Ankopplung" auf Linksanschlag. b. Gefechtsmäßige Bedienung. Beachte, dass der Abstand der Lichtstriche im Seitenrichtrohr stets 1,5 cm betragen muss. Durch Änderung der Empfindlichkeit durch den Drehknopf "Pot" ändert sich auch dieser Abstand. Durch Drehen an dem Drehknopf "Ankopplung" am Hilfssender müssen daher Lichtstriche laufend auf 1,5 cm Abstand gehalten werden. B 2 beobachtet das Übersichtsrohr. Bei Feindstörung durch Folien ruft er aus: "Feindstörung Folien" M.F. befielt " Sonderbetrieb "Würzlaus". B 2 schaltet Sonderbetrieb "Würzlaus" ein durch Drehen des Bedienungsknopfes "Ankopplung" auf Rechtsanschlag schaltet Kehrbildanzeige ein durch Umlegen des Schaltknopfes im Mittelteil auf der rechten Seite des Richtgerätes von "S" auf "N". sucht in der vermutlichen Richtung regelt die Empfindlichkeit laufend nach durch Drehen am Drehknopf ''Pot" . bringt Lichtstrich auf normalen Abstand von 1,5 cm durch Bedienungsknopf ''Ankopplung'' am Hilfssender Blatt 6 zu Anlage 4 Noch B 2 beobachtet das Übersichtsrohr. Beim Erkennen einer ''Würzlaus'' ruft er aus: ''Aufgefasst in 130!" B 1 stellt die von B 2 ausgerufene Entfernung durch den e‐Grobtrieb ein hält laufend die ''Würzlaus" auf den Dunkelpunkt durch Drehen am e‐Feintrieb. B 2 u. B 3 messen den Seiten‐ bzw. Höhenwinkel, in dem die beiden kehrbildlichen Würzläuse auf gleicher Größe gehalten werden. Bei genauer Einstellung rufen sie aus: ''Seitenwinkel (Höhenwinkel) ‐ Null 1''.
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RADIO AND RADAR EQUIPMENT: Wilde Sau item 58
SECRET A. D. I. (K) Report No. 357/1945.
THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION HAS BEEN OBTAINED FROM P/W. AS THE STATEMENTS MADE HAVE NOT AS YET BEEN VERIFIED, NO MENTION OF THEM. SHOULD BE MADE IN INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OF COMMANDS OR LOWER FORMATIONS, NOR SHOULD THEY BE ACCEPTED AS FACTS UNTIL COMMENTED ON IN AIR MINISTRY INTELLIGENCE SUMMARIES OR SPECIAL COMMUNICATIONS. RADIO AND RADAR EQUIPMENT IN THE LUFTWAFFE - II Navigational Aids. 1. This report is the second of the series dealing with radio and radar equipment in the Luftwaffe. 2. As in the case of the first of the series (A.D.I.(K) 343/1945) dealing with Blind Landing and Airborne Communications Equipment, it is based on interrogation of General Nachrichtenführer MARTINI, Director General of G.A.F. Signals, and a few important members of his staff, and has been supported by a file of current papers which were in the possession of the General’s Chief of Staff. 3. An index of the numerical designations of the navigational equipment mentioned in this report appears in Appendix I. 4. For convenient reference, a translation of the document entitled "Funkausrüstung der Flugzeugmuster, Notprogramm" (signal Equipment in the G.A.F. - Emergency Program) - item 45/99 ff in A.D.I.(K) Documents List 45/9 - which has also appeared as an Appendix to A.D.I.(K) 343/1945, is reproduced as Appendix II to the present report but the list of equipment contained in that document has been omitted as Appendix I gives a fuller list. TRENDS OF DEVELOPMENT. 5. Throughout the course of the war, the general standard of German navigational training was undoubtedly inferior to that of the Allies. A simple form of navigation was taught but navigators track plotted only and relied on W/T aids and in particular positioning by means of loop fixes as the main basis for their navigation. 6. During the early part of the war extensive use was made of Knickebein and other beam systems, but later this form of navigational aid gave way to the "Y" control system (better known by the Allied codeword Benito) and "Egon". 7. Sonne was universally accepted as an outstanding success and from the time of its inception in 1942 research was continuously directed towards overcoming its imperfection, in particular the range limitation. Komet was a typical example, of attempted improvement on these lines 8. The Germans were patently backward in the field of pulse systems and the majority - if not all - of their navigational aids of this type were copied from Allied methods. 9. The fear of the Allied countermeasures was much to the fore during the last two years and considerable research and efforts was devoted to offsetting such interference and to perfecting systems which would reduce and if possible preclude the danger of jamming. Another factor always present in the minds of those responsible for tactical navigational requirements was that the apparatus must be as light and small as possible because of the limited space available in German aircraft. 10. During the last stages of the war, and as a natural consequence of German air policy, being forced to concentrate on the defensive, thereby involving almost exclusive use of fighter power, a great deal of attention was devoted to the development of simple navigational aids suitable for single-engine aircraft of which Rübezahl was a typical example. D/F LOOP EQUIPMENT. PeGe (Peil Gerät) 6. 11. PeGe 6 was the successor of PeGe 5, the standard loop D/F, set in use at the beginning of the war, and. operated on 150 - 1200 kc/s (2000-250 meters). It provided automatic D/F facilities, the W/T operator merely having to tune to the signal and the "answer" being produced on a course indicator. 12. In the opinion of P/W, who was responsible for operational requirements in the navigational field and who had had fairly extensive navigational experience with K.G.40, PeGe 6 was less reliable than the manually-operated PeGe 5 as the automatic D/F facilities could not distinguish between the true signal and jamming and were apt to record bearing midway between the two if they were near together. The human ear was much more acute and could distinguish the minimum of the real signal from that of the "phoney” one. It had the further disadvantage that it was a heavier piece of equipment than the manually operated set. FuGe 141 13. The FuGe 141 operating on a frequency band of 58.0 - 59.2 mc/s was a receiver with a D/F loop fitted to Air Rescue aircraft used for homing on to the NS 4 emergency radio set carried on the chest by pilots. 14. The NS 4 had a flexible steel tape aerial and batteries which gave it an endurance of 2 to 2,5 hours. FuGe 142. 15. The FuGe 142 using the 2000 - 250 metre band was a small D/F battery set for use in emergency in the event of failure of the aircraft' s electricity supply. 16. The FuGe 142 had a manually-operated loop and its accuracy was only 10° to 15°. 17. When the P/W who, in October 1944, took over the navigational tactical requirements first made its acquaintance, he discovered that the designer of the emergency set, while having the laudable object of assisting a crew in dire emergency when they where probably well and truly lost, had omitted to include any sensing arrangement. The set was, therefore, quickly scrapped as being as much of a danger as an aid. FuGe 145 18. The FuGe 145 was a simple type of D/F set in development for use in single-seater aircraft. It was for use with M/F beacons and was designed for use by coastal reconnaissance aircraft, as for example the Do.335, so that they could obtain a bearing when flying at low level. 19. It was much lighter than the PeGe 6 and had no automatic facilities, but was very easy to operate. P/W had thought that it might ultimately supersede the PeGe 6 for other types of aircraft. Suggested loop for fighter aircraft 20. The research centre at Rechlin had been asked to examine a rough type of loop for singleseater fighter aircraft, which would consist of a loop built into the pilot' s helmet. It was thought that this would enable the pilot to establish the general direction of a beacon by movements of his head and without recourse to the use of a compass. 21. This idea was tried out and seemed promising, but was never fully developed. HOMING BEACONS. Schwanboje. 22. The Schwanboje was a waterborne V.H.F. beacon dropped by parachute and originally used by K.G.40 for marking convoys or submarines. In the autumn of 1944 a 1ine of Schwan buoys was used to aid the He.111's when launching V-1’s from the North Sea against this country. 23. The beacon consisted of a frame aerial and transmitted on a wavelength which could be homed on by the FuGe 17, the standard equipment of K.G.40 in 1942 when the Schwanboje came into use. 24. The set was powered by accumulators and had a live of five hours; by the means of a clockwork device it could be pre-set before release so that it ran for a testing period immediately on release and later started up again after a prescribed interval governed by the expected time of arrival of the homing aircraft. The buoy was fitted with a self-destroying charge operated automatically. 25. A later type of Schwanboje operated on the 38 - 42 mc/s waveband so that aircraft equipped with the FuGe 162 could also use the system. Biene 26. Biene is the code word for a responder beacon. The idea of responder beacons for homing purposes had only been hit on in 1944 and Bienen to respond to the different airborne radar sets were still under development in 1945. The FuGe 243 - Hohentwiel Biene – had been used by coastal units in Norway, in February or March 1945. 27. Responder beacons were also being developed for use in the Baldur method of navigation (see paragraphs 79, 82 of this report). BEAM SYSTEMS. Zyklop. 28. This was the latest form of the well-known Knickebein working on 30 - 33,3 mc/s and received by E.B.L.3 in the aircraft. It was a mobile station which could be fully erected into operation within a week. 29. A still more mobile unit known as the Bock-Zyklop had been introduced. This could be set up in three days and could be adapted for use on the FuGe 16 frequency although as yet, according to documents, no visual indicator for the FuGe 16 had been developed. 30. The 120 W ground transmitter was called the ???? which gave a beam 0.5° wide and a range of 300 km. at a height of 5,000 meters. The Zyklop systems had been made use of on the Russian front up to the end of the hostilities. Sonne. 31. The Sonne beacon system which worked on a frequency of 270 - 480 kc/s was received in the aircraft on the FuGe 10. It was considered an extremely effective daylight system but the range limitation was a disadvantage. Fixes could be obtained from ranges up to 1,000 - 1,200 km. Sonne 6 at Quimper which was the most efficient of the Sonne beacons, had been used on an occasion at a distance of 1,400 km. 32. The sectors served by Sonne covered, an angle of 120 – 150°. The beacon was very reliable over the centre sector of 100°, but the error increased progressively towards the edges of the beam in conformity with the sine law. 33. At night errors up to 4° were liable to occur even in the centre of the sector of the beacon and no real use could be made of it. Mond. 34. To improve the Sonne beacons both in range, and accuracy, an experimental system working on the same principle, but on 3000/6000 kc/s was tried out in 1942. The shorter wave transmission did not prove very reliable and was given up about the end of 1943. Stern. 35. Finally a beacon of the Sonne type under the name "Stern" was designed for use on a V.H. frequency. It, not unnaturally, only gave optical range and was, therefore, of no practical value and was not developed. Dora. 36. One P/W had seen documentary mention of Dora which he believed was a navigational aid system and a precursor of Komet. He did not know whether it worked on the same principle but the Komet experimental site at Kolby was on the former Dora site. Komet. 37. In 1942 the question of navigation over the Atlantic stood in the limelight . As the He 177 was supposed to be coming into service shortly to enable K.G.40 to reach further West, the need for navigational equipment of longer range became acute. 38. A year or so earlier Professor von HANDEL had categorically stated in a lecture that a long-range navigational system based on pulse would inevitably be extremely inaccurate. In view of Professor von HANDEL's views on pulse systems, an improved form of Sonne which would give much greater ranges and be less susceptible to night effect was given high priority. 39. The system evolved was called "Komet" and experimental stations were erected at Bordeaux and Kolby (see A.D.I.(K) 364/1944). The ground station called for an array of no less than 127 masts and 19 control huts in order to cover a 90° sector. It worked admirably provided a 10° sector only was covered, but as soon as the planned 90° sector was put into operation, mutual interference between the masts arose and the various lobes radiated were no longer of symmetrical pattern, with the result that large errors crept in. 40. Research on this delayed the project considerably. After the invasion when long distance reconnaissance in the Atlantic was no longer practical politics, the Komet system was given up without ever having been effectively used. The development people were the more pleased to dispense with it since it left the German radio research and industry free to deal with other more urgent matters. 41. The beacon was to operate on frequencies of 5000, 9000 or 12,000 kc/s received on the FuGe 10K, and it was estimated that ranges up to 3000 km would be obtained. The system employed was to be similar to that used in the Sonne but instead of obtaining one reading per minute, oscillation of the beam was to be speeded up to give 100 readings par minute. 42. The true bearing of the aircraft was automatically recorded by the FuGe 124 which was known as the Kometschreiber. The recording took the form of a series of vertical lines, one for each reading, printed on a strip of paper. At the same time as the lines were printed the Kometschreiber recorded the section of the swept area in which the aircraft was flying, thus giving what amounted to a rough position. 43. The fine reading was obtained from the length of the recorded lines. Any inaccuracies due to night effect could be easily eliminated by averaging the length of the lines, as recorded, on the paper strip, by eye. Erika. 44. Erika was a navigation system (see A.D.I.(K) 364 and 409/1944.) which had already reached the development stage in 1942 but its operational employment was of brief duration and it was soon discarded in favour of Bernhard. 45. Erika was based on the principle of a V.H.F. (30 - 33 mc/s) beam oscillating rapidly over a segment of about 60 – 90°. The beam was phased, a different phase being picked up in different sections of the segment and read off in relation to a standard phase producer in the aircraft. In order to obtain a fix, two such Erika stations had to be received and to receive each station no less than two E.B.L.3's were necessary making a total of four receivers. 46. The range presentation unit in the aircraft, FuGe 121, took the form of a clock-face with a needle indicator and calibrated, P/W thought, from 0 -100. A specially prepared map was required to establish bearing. 47. A disadvantage of Erika was the vulnerability to jamming, interference signals modifying the phase and thereby giving inaccurate readings. The great weight, carried and the bulk of the four receivers, which were particularly cumbersome in the relatively small aircraft in use in the G.A.F. made its widespread use impracticable. Bernhardine. 48. This system was first introduced in 1942 for use by bomber aircraft, but was later dropped in favour of the Benito and Egon control systems. With the increasing British jamming during night raids it was reintroduced for use in night fighter commentary (see A.D.I.(K) 125/1945, paras.5 to 29), which it was thought could only be jammed with great difficulty. 49. The term “Bernhard” was used for the ground stations whilst the airborne recording equipment was called Bernhardine or FuGe 120. The latter made use of the E.B.L.3. receiver as the transmissions lay in the 30-33 mc/s band. 50. At the time of the German capitulation, the following three transmitting stations were in operation, the first two, of which could transmit commentary.- -Thisted, on N.W. coast of Denmark. -Bretstedt, N. of Husum, Germany. -Trebbin, S.E. of Berlin. 51. A further station near Breslau had been almost completed when it had to be dismantled on account of the Russian advance. Additional stations were in the course of construction near Kassel, Munich, Pilsen and Vienna. 52. The Bernhardine system was looked upon as a considerable improvement on Erika. It gave 360° coverage as compared to 60/90° with Erika and, whereas from the jamming aspect stray signals could disturb the phase of Erika causing false indication, in the case of Bernhardine, interference merely resulted in no reading being possible, and furthermore to attain this through 360° a very powerful jamming transmitter flying near the ground station would be needed. 53. The Bernhardine system was not regarded as unjammable but it was thought that use of high power and aerial gain would render jamming by airborne means impracticable. 54. In addition to the E.B.L.3 receiver, the airborne Hellschreiber FuGe 120, also called the Bernhardine, which gave both bearing and commentary was employed. According to P/W the FuGe 120 was large and weighty and the first improvement aimed at was to reduce the weight and provide a set which occupied less space in the aircraft. To this end an attempt was made to eliminate the use of paper strip for the Hellschreiber and a rotating "Folienschreiber" a cellophane paper moving over a sticky carbon surface which constituted a self-eraser - was employed. This projected recording method proved a failure and the use of paper strip had to be reverted to. According to documents the type using paper strip was known as FuGe 120a, and the self-erasing recorder FuGe 120b. 55. A smaller model, the FuGe 120k, to operate on the paper strip principle which constituted the latest improvement, was still in the development stage at the conclusion of hostilities. Previously the ground transmitter broadcast simultaneously from the upper and lower aerial arrays on two frequencies close enough to one another for them both to be received on one channel of the E.B.L.3. One lobe was used for coarse D/F, the other for fine. The two frequencies were then separated by a filter before being fed into the Hellschreiber. The FuGe 120k was designed for use with a ground transmitter operating only on the coarse D/F frequency. The filter could therefore be dispensed with and considerable weight saved in the airborne set at the expense of some accuracy in D/F. 56. With the loss of D/F accuracy the sharp “V” in the vertical printing indicating the reading (see diagram A.D.I.(K) 125/1945 para.18) became a gap about 4° wide. To facilitate the reading of the centre of the gap by eye, and to reduce the size and weight of the apparatus, the vertical lines referred to above were superimposed on the scale which could then only be read in the gap. This allowed the paper strip to be considerably narrower. 57. The FuGe 120k was designed primarily for use in single seat jet aircraft but was also to be embodied in the Ju.88 where space was at a premium, as soon as sufficient numbers of this set were available. Hermine. 58. The Hermine system was originally developed, in response to a tactical requirement formulated during the second part of 1942, as a navigational aid for the purpose of giving an approximate bearing to single-engine night fighters engaged on “Wilde Sau” operations. 59. By the time the initial difficulties in development had been overcome Wilde Sau night fighting had almost ceased; it was found however that Hermine could be used to advantage by day fighters, and it came into operational use. 60. An accuracy of ±5° was assumed, but it was found in practice that this could be improved upon to ±3° by experienced pilots. 61. Thirteen or fourteen ground stations were in operation by Easter 1945 which, P/W claimed, gave complete coverage of the Reich. It was intended to fit two Schlechtwetter (bad weather) Fighter Geschwader with the necessary airborne equipment, and this program had been onethird completed by May 1945. One P/W had heard that ten to fifteen Me.262's of K.G.51 were amongst the aircraft so equipped. 62. The following may be added in modification of the description of the Hermine system given in A.D.I.(K) 125/1945, paras.59 to 62. The Hermine rotating beacon transmits a continuous tone on which is superimposed a speaking clock which counts from 1 to 35, each figure representing tens of degree. Over an angle of about 15° the continuous tone falls to a minimum and rises again. During this period the voice appears to become more audible and the pilot can estimate where the minimum of continuous tone occurs, and so obtain his bearing from the beacon. 63. The beacon recognition is given by means of a self-evident code name for example, "Berolina” for Berlin – which is spoken by the voice in place of 000°. 64. The airborne equipment is the FuGe 125 consisting of the E.B.L.3 with the Tzg (Telephoniezusatzgerät) which enables the 30.0 - 33.3 mc/s transmission picked up on the E.B.L.3 receiver to be heard in the pilot's headphones. Though the Hermine beacons were fully operational there was a scarcity of FuGe 125 sets, as a result of which practical experience of this system was too limited to judge of its efficiency or to lead to further improved tactical requirements been formulated. PULSE SYSTEM. Ingolstadt 65. All the P/W had heard reference to Ingolstadt and agreed that it was a long-range navigational system. 66. One P/W thought that Ingolstadt was the cover name for a pulse navigation system using hyperbolic curves and similar to British Gee; it was originated by Telefunken in 1938 but was then turned down by the R.L.M. In his recollection the original Telefunken idea derived from theoretical discussions at an international conference before the war. 67. As mentioned earlier under the heading of Komet, Professor von HANDEL maintained that owing to the incidence of mutual interference between direct and reflected waves the system was impracticable at long range. In consequence of von HANDEL’s view the system was dropped. 68. Much consternation and annoyance was occasioned in 1944, when it was found that the Allies were successfully operating a similar system. 69. Truhe is the cover name used to describe navigational aid system, using ground stations, similar to those of British Gee. In effect the British Gee stations were also used, the airborne sets being almost identical with the British Gee boxes. Truhe. 70. There is no very distinct difference between "Truhe" and "Hyperbel". The latter term was originally coined to denote our Gee. It was also used when German aircraft equipped with British Gee sets made use of British ground stations. 71. The British Gee chain was used successfully but it was realised that so soon as the Germans lost an aircraft, over England, a change would be made. The German "Y" service monitored the British ground stations to follow any change in Gee phasing and passed advice of such change to their aircraft by W/T. 72. Truhe referred to the German system which was ultimately to cover the 20 to 100 mc/s band and employed various types of ground transmitters including Feuerhilfe, Feuerstein, Feuerzange and Feuerland. All these transmitters could also be used to jam our own Gee, further details of which will appear in a subsequent report on German Radio Countermeasures. The original 46 to 50 mc/s system was known as Truhe I and the new 30 to 60 mc/s system as Truhe II. 73. A chain of Truhe stations was built around Berlin, primarily for training purposes and there were in addition groups of ground stations in the Schwarzwald and in Pomerania. The last named was intended for operations against Russia and it is not known if the stations were destroyed before their capture. 74. The airborne sets which were known as FuGe 122 covering 46-50 mc/s and FuGe 123 covering 25-75 mc/s were replicas of the British Gee boxes and according to P/W were equivalent to British R.1324 and R.1355. These German sets were slightly smaller and more compact than the British sets. 75. Truhe was used by F.A.G.2 and K.G.66, but up to the time of capitulation only a few FuGe 122 and FuGe 123 sets had been produced and only one R.F. box for the latter set. Baldur. 76. The Baldur range-measuring system is comparable to the British G.H. and appears to have been imitated from it. It was referred to by P/W as “Egon in reverse" and was the only navigational system developed by the German by means of which an aircraft could measure distance from a known source as opposed to fixing itself by a position line. As the G.A.F. staff were still thinking in terms of a grandiose bomber policy as late as June 1944, it was intended for use by bomber aircraft for pinpointing targets and for accurate blind bombing. 77. The wavelength employed was in the neighbourhood of 2-4 meters and fell in the SN 2 band. 78. Only two experimental transmitters, both located in Lower Silesia, were erected and one P/W maintained that this system never progressed beyond experimental trials by the manufacturers. It was eventually relegated to low priority owing to the virtual cessation of German bomber operations and the pressure of more urgent demands on radio research and the radio industry. 79. The airborne equipment was known as the FuGe 126 which was made up of a transmitter to interrogate a ground responder beacon, a receiver and a presentation unit. The receiver and transmitter were SN 2 units, though P/W thought they might have been slightly modified for use with Baldur. 80. From documents, the presentation unit appears to have been a modification of the Würzburg range measurement tube, and the accuracy is given as ± 100 meters at all ranges, but this was thought to be purely theoretical and P/W doubted whether it would have been possible to achieve this accuracy in actual practice. 81. A smaller airborne set, the FuGe 126k (k = klein = small) was built for use by single-seat aircraft. In reducing the size and weight of the set, and making it pilot-operated, accuracy had to be sacrificed. P/W, who was responsible for putting up the tactical requirements, considered a clock-face presentation to be the ideal solution. It was expected that the accuracy of the FuGe 126k would then be of the order of 500 meters independent of range. Baldur - Truhe 82. It was planned to experiment on a combination of Baldur and Truhe (Gee) for use by bombers. The intention was to use a hyperbolic grid line of Truhe for the target approach. This could be pre-set, and the pilot could fly along it by keeping the blip centralised, and could ascertain his exact position along the line by measuring his distance from a Baldur beacon. This system was considered simpler particularly for a single-seater aircraft, than the method of using two hyperbolic grid lines or two distances from Baldur beacons. The first experimental sets were to be ready in the autumn of this year. Baldur - Bernhardine 83. A further project was a combination of Baldur and Bernhardine to give simultaneous bearing and range. The range indication was to be obtained by the pilot pressing a knob when the range would appear in kilometres on a dial. This system was suggested for use by both day fighters and bombers. GROUND CONTROL SYSTEMS, Benito. 84. The Benito system of control using FuGe 16, known to the Germans as "Y", is too well known to warrant description. The following paragraphs deal with recent developments. 85. When operating the bomber Benito procedure with the narrow beam. (0.3°) essential for azimuth accuracy, it was easy for the bomber pilot to get on to one of the side lobes in error since these were only about 3° from the main beam. 86. In order to minimise the possibility of mistake and to relieve the pilot of the strain of flying on a beam, an automatic device, the FuGe 28a, was in use which was the improved and final form of the old Y-Gerät of 1941. Documents dated about June 1944 show that it was used in conjunction with FuGe 17, but P/W thought that it had been modified for use with FuGe 16ZY as well. 87. The procedure was that the bomber pilot flew on instructions conveyed over the FuGe 17 until it had been established by ground D/F stations that he was on the true beam, when the code word "Bako" would be given whereupon the pilot would switch on the FuGe 28a which took over control of the automatic pilot and kept him on the beam. 88. P/W gave the accuracy of range measurement with the Bomber Benito procedure as only ± 1 km. at maximum range. Egon. 89. The original Egon procedure which involved the use of two Freyas, the one for rough positioning and the other for fine positioning - later became known as "Egon Einstand" (One location) to differentiate from an improved system termed “Egon Zweistand” 90. Egon Zweistand was evolved to offset the inaccuracies in azimuth D/F, and cash in on the range accuracy of radar. With Zweistand a third Freya was introduced, placed some considerable distance from the other two Freyas in order to give a distance cut. It was intended for use by bomber aircraft operating over England or on long range sea missions. 91. The original Zweistand system, which was first tried out in Italy by a Schlacht unit, was somewhat primitive in that the readings from the extra Freya were telephoned through to the plotting centre and worked out before being plotted on the Seeburg table. 92. To eliminate the delay thereby involved a landline connection was introduced to feed the Freya pulse to the C.R.T., which then had two blips showing ranges from the two Freya sites. The vulnerability of landline to disturbance and destruction later led to the development of a W/T transmitter and this method was employed successfully in operations. 93. Since the Freya pulse was not strong enough to trigger off the FuGe 25A at ranges exceeding 250 kilometres, it was planned to supplant the Freya by extra powerful Wassermanns, and thereby increase the effective range of Egon Zweistand to 350 kilometres. 94. A further line of development was the provision of a new type of control table giving the exactitude of plotting necessary for pinpoint bombing. This control table, which was under development at Rechlin, made use of complicated mechanical apparatus for accurate projection of the position of the bomber. One of these tables was destroyed in the course of a daylight air attack on Rechlin in February 1945; two other tables were in existence at the time of the capitulation, and were located somewhere in Western Germany. 95. Egon when first introduced was received with some scepticism by the crews, as it was felt that it was too vulnerable to jamming. After it had been used operationally without being jammed in the attacks on London in March 1944, the procedure was adopted with greater confidence, and it gained a good reputation. As recounted in A.D.I.(K) 343/1945, Egon was always favoured by the R.L.M. technical development section in preference to Benito control. 96. A drawback of the system was its restricted range at low altitude, which according to P/W was the reason why it was not used in conjunction with V.1 operations. Nachtlicht 97. The Nachtlicht system was the first method of control not using R/T speech to be improvised by the Germans, and had been tried out during the raids on London in the spring of 1944. 98. It had been observed that the red signal lamp of the FuGe 25A was illuminated when the aircraft was being swept by a Freya, and it was suggested that use could be made of this as a means of transmitting morse signals from the ground. A Freya operating on a special wavelength, which P/W thought was 2.55 meters, was set up on the Channel coast and was used to send simple instructions to the aircraft attacking London by means of visual morse indications on the lamp of the FuGe 25A. 99. The primitive method of giving distant control indications was the forerunner of "Nachtfee", "Barbara" and "Barbarossa". 100. Luftkurier was the first development of the Nachtlicht idea. It was primitive device intended to give visual indication to the pilot by means of a pointer which was started and stopped by the reception of pulses. 101. P/W thought that Luftkurier was first tried out by K.G.66 on the Freya band, but it was so easy to jam by the addition of extra pulses that it was never developed. Nachtfee 102. Nachtfee was the term used to describe a system for the transmission of control instructions to a pilot in the beam of the controlling Freya through the medium of a C.R.T. indicator similar to the Lichtenstein range tube. The airborne equipment used was known as FuGe 136 and weighed 12 kg. 103. The original purpose of Nachtfee was, to provide a solution to the jamming of R/T control systems, and it had been used operationally by the Pathfinders of K.G.66 for mines in the Scheldt estuary. It was to be adapted for use by night fighters to overcome our jamming of the night fighter commentary. 104. Nachtfee was a system using the FuGe 25A as receiver. 105. The presentation screen in the aircraft was inscribed with various commands both on the inside and outside of a circular time trace. There was a stationary zero blip in the 12 o'clock position, and when an instruction was radiated the pulses received caused a second blip to emerge from the first and travel round the C.R. tube in a clock-wise direction, presumably by a slight change in p.r.f. This blip came to a stop and the command corresponding to its position could be read off on the inside of the time trace where a total of about eight different instructions were inscribed. It took from one to two second, for the blip to travel round the tube. 106. It was thought that the further eight commands inscribed on the outside of the time trace were denoted by the blip making a complete circle starting round a second time before coming to rest at any one of the eight sectors. In this way a total of sixteen different orders could be given. For night fighters such instructions as "turn left/right", "climb", "dive”, etc. appeared on the inner side and figures for transmitting bearing on the outer side of the trace. 107. This system was used operationally, but it was found that, apart from the susceptibility to jamming, other pulse transmissions could interfere by unlocking the system and thereby cause wrong positioning of the indicator blip. 108. Another pronounced objection to the Nachtfee lay in the fact that it was necessary for a member of the crew to watch the C.R.T. indicator uninterruptedly for missing one blip indication might give the message a false value. It was not therefore possible to use it in singleseater aircraft. Barbara 109. This apparatus, also called FuGe 138, consisted of an attachment to the FuGe 25A receiver and only weighed 2 kg. This unit contained an audio filter which allowed the pilot to hear morse signals superimposed on the Freya interrogator transmission if they were emitted on a suitable audio frequency usually about 800 cycles. By keying other morse signals on different audio frequencies and equipping aircraft with suitable filters, more than one aircraft could be controlled by a single Freya. 110. Barbara was to be used for Egon control of ground-strafing aircraft and bombers but not for night fighters. 111. In the Germans' opinion there were three disadvantages, namely that the Allies could intercept and make use of signals so transmitted, that the aircraft had to be in the beam of the Freya if it were to receive, and so an aircraft "lost" by the Freya owing to jamming could not be communicated with and finally that, though intended for single-engined aircraft, fighter pilots rarely had sufficient command of morse to be able to use this type of control. Barbarossa 112. Barbarossa was a set designed to meet the same requirements as Barbara but to remedy two of the drawback mentioned in the last paragraph. 113. The instructions to the aircraft were to be transmitted by code pulse modulations which were passed through a "pulse filter" in the airborne set and a written indication obtained on a Hellschreiber. The pulse filter and Hellschreiber unit were attachments to the FuGe 25A and were known as the FuGe 139. This apparatus was in development at Rechlin under the supervision of Stabs.Ing. von HAUTEVILLE. 114. With this arrangement pulse modulations could not be read by the Allies, and for spoof purposes in order to produce a wrong indication we would have had to know the exact type of modulation accepted by it. Visual indication was also quicker and did not depend on knowledge of morse. 115. This scheme was only in a very early stage of development and P/W were unable to give details. It was hoped that in due course it would be possible to develop matters a stage further and find a means of transmitting scrambled speech instead of morse, but P/W understood that the question of pulse modulation for speech transmission had not been solved. Rübezahl 116. Consideration had been given in 1945 to the introduction of a crude system of navigation which could be only used within the boundaries of the Reich. This was to go under the code name of Rübezahl, and the fact that it was seriously considered and actively supported by the P/W responsible for Navigational Aids on the G.A.F. signals staff is an interesting reflection of the depths to which a combination of Allied jamming under-trained fighter had forced German technique. 117. It was expected that in the course of the summer of 1945 thousands of 162 Volksjäger would be available for the protection of the Fatherland. They were to be equipped with FuGe 24, which was to become the standard G.A.F. R/T set as described in A.D.I.(K) 343/1945. This set did not for the present give Benito control facilities and indeed as they were short-range, high speed, fair-weather aircraft it was not certain that Benito control would be essentially needed. 118. It was essential that their relatively inexperienced pilots should have a simple means by which they could locate their approximate position without any additional navigation equipment having either to be manufactured or carried in the aircraft. It was therefore decided to develop a system which could be used with FuGe 24. 119. In order to direct the Volksjäger pilots to their target, recourse was to be had to the night fighter system of broadcasting a commentary, and this commentary was to be combined with the primitive navigation system Rübezahl. 120. It was therefore planned to set up ground transmitters over Germany at 30 km intervals. The transmitters were to be beamed upwards, so that at 6,000 meters the polar diagram was about 40 km in diameter and lobes from neighbouring transmitters just overlapped, thus covering the whole area. Each transmitter emitted a plain language recognition signal in the form of the name of its district, e.g. Halle, Magdeburg, etc. 121. All transmitters were to be operated on the same frequency so that to locate himself the pilot merely tuned his FuGe 24 to the frequency for the day. The ground transmitters were to be adapted from the FuGe 15 transmitters which had been manufactured in quantity as described in paras. 23-39 of A.D.I.(K) 343/1945 before it was found that the FuGe 15 was unsuitable as an airborne R/T set. They were renamed Bs.15 (Bodensender). 122. Later it was believed that the night fighters which were also to carry FuGe 24 (see appendix 1) would also use the Rübezahl commentary as yet another alternative source for vectoring themselves to the bomber stream.
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German traffic analysis of russian communications
EXTRACTS FROM TICOM REPORT I-112 : VOLUME 9--GERMAN TRAFFIC ANALYSIS OF RUSSIAN COMMUNICATIONS Lt. Werner RASCH, of the 353rd German Air Force Signal Intelligence Regiment in the East, gives the folloving account ot the development and achievements of the Russian Long Range Bomber Forces (ADD--Avitsiya Dalneye Dyestviya). "Soon after the outbreak of the Russian-German . war, practically allot the Russian Long Range Bomber Porce was destroyed, either by German attacks on Russian airfields, or in combat with Geman fighters. What was lett of it was withdrawn from action. Marshall GOLOVANOV, chief of ADD, reorganized his forces with the intention of using them in night opera~ions only, owing to the threat presented by the strong German flak defense. The first successful operations following the reorganization took place in the battle of Stalingrad (September 1942 - February 1943). From then on, ADD operations played an important part in all Russian ottens1ves. The training for night operations was of long duration; at the end of'the war each bomber reg1ment had crews which were still in a training status. . "The achievements of' the ADD units were not - very impressive. Crews were not trained tor carrying out night attacks in close formation. In the latter days of the war 60 aircraft of a division need approximately one hour to assemble and take off, and even this was accomplished only- under the most favourable navigational and meteorological conditions. In planning an attack, each division was allotted 20 minutes over the target; in that time it was intended that all aircraft or one division should have completed their mission and moved out to make room for the next division. Unless targets on the front itself were being raided, the front line was usually crossed before dark. This permitted the take-off to be made during daylight, and the first aircraft to take of were held in an assembly area in order that a close-flying formation be formed. Formations equipped with radio-telephone communications were again brought into close order by the leading aircraft of the regiments before going into the bomb run. Each regiment had several Pathfinder aircraft, which were flown by the most experienced crews. Since the success of the mission depended upon the1r efforts. In addition to theflares, they usually carried a 1,,000 pound bomb.Point-to-Point Nets. --These po1nt-to-point nets of the Long Range Bomber Forces (ADD) alone were a sufficient basis on Which the Germans could build up an accurate picture ot the ADD organization. When the 18th Russian Air Army was reorganized the Germans immediately recognized such steps from traffic on these nets. The most profitable traffic in these nets from an intelligence standpoint, came from units which were widely separated in the field as this necessitated the use of radio facilities for communication. In instances where the units were close together very little s1gnal intelligence could be gained since there was slight need tor radio transmissions. From the intercept and analysis of traffic on these point-to-point nets movements ot the Russian Air Army units, locations and occupations of airfields numbers of operational and unoperational aircraft and locations of supply dumps could be determined. Traffic intercepted-on these nets also gave the Germans considerable information regarding intended operations and offensives. One outstanding success along this line occurred when a Russian order to bomber units was intercepted by the Germans. The message ordered an attack on Shavli, Lithuania, where an entire German Panzer Army was immobilized due to a lack of sufficient fuel. The German Signal Intelligence Service reported the information to the Lufttlotte which provided fighters to meet the Russian Long Range Bombers while German JU 52' s dropped gasoline supplies to the encircled Panzer Army and enabled it to escape. Call Signs and Frequencies. --Three-character call signs were used in the radio nets between the Air Army and Air Corps. They were changed once during the day and once at night, at which time the frequencies also were changed. I. Call signs were based on an arbitrary combination of letters and digits and were selected from a call sign list that changed monthly. The Germans were unable to determine whether any definite system was employed for the choosing of the call signs. They did notice however that during the course of a month a call sign used by a given radio station might be repeated without the succession of call signs which had followed at the time of the previous occurrence. Traffic between corps and divisions took place with a periodic change of call signs, but on fixed trequenc1es. This fact aided the intercept tasks of the German Signal Intelligence." … "a. Supply Traffic. --Valuable intelligence was obtained by the German Signal Intelligence from the interception of [RUSSIAN] radlo traffic which gave details on supplies of fuel, ammunition and other materials. Details of railway movements of supplies were transmitted by the District Air Base Depots to thier subordinate airfield battalions. These messages contained information on the destination, number or railway cars being used, amount and type of supplies, and the scheduled time of arrival. When the trains arrived at their destination a message announcing their arrival was sent to the airfield battalions. As a result ot the exploitation of this type of traffic the Germans were able to bomb successfully the stations soon after trainloads or fuel and ammunition had arrived. In the Southern sector a service Command point-to-point radio net reported arrivals of replacement aircraft tor the 17th, 5th, and 8th Air Armies. These replacement planes were ferried from the factories to the airfields. Tactical'. units down to regimental level receipted for these planes and supplies, and from interception of these strength reports the Germans were able to estimate the production and distribution rate of Russian planes. Current fuel and ammunition supplies at airfields were reported on pre-arranged message forms transmitted by the air-field battalions. These messages, since fuel and ammunition supplies were always increased prior to an offensive, afforded the Germans a sund basis for predicting impending Russian offensives. b. Miscellaneous Air Service Command Traffic. --The Russian Air Service Command reported by radio on the achievements in salvaging German aircraft which had been shot down or which had been forced to land. These reports afforded the Germans with a source of informat1on concerning their missing crews, and in many, cases it was possible for the Germans to inform families that the crew members were alive and were Russian prisoners of war. Reports of interrogation of captured German military personnel were also often transmitted and intercepted by the Germans. In some cases as a result of the information contained in these reports, the German Command carried out court martial proceedings in absentia where the intercepted information carried sufficient proof that the German prisoners of war had revealed information of a secret nature. An Air service Command of the 8th Russian Air Army on the southern front reported routes to be flown by aircraft in large-scale ground attacks, giving the time at which the attack would take place. For such attacks the Russian Air Army usually ordered the placing of smoke markers in the frontal area on the day before the attack would take place. These smokemarkers were used by the Russian planes as an orientation point, and not only indicated the proposed direction to be flown, but also corresponded to the direction the ground force would advance. After a study of these smoke signals the German Air Force Slgnial Intelligence learned that the signals were lit thirty minutes to an hour before the actual time of attack. Thus, when it was learned that smoke signals had been set out the German Signal Intelligence could usually inform the Air and Ground forces some twenty-four hours in advance of plans tor a Russian offensive."
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Re: Researching the Luftwaffe through Prisoner Interrogations
Thanks Bruce, these continue to be fascinating reading, nice to see the other side of the hill, so to speak. Getting Court Martial proceedings against you in absentia, not good, hope nothing happened to the relevant families.
cheers Allan
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Allan Hillman |
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PREDICTING ALLIED BOMBING ATTACKS
TICOM I-109
Extracts of translation from report of Lt. LUDWIG of Chi. Stelle O.B.d.L (note: TICOM report is dated post-war but no date is given for original report from LUDWIG.)
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