AN/FPS-14 Radar

The AN/FPS-14 was a medium-range search Radar used by the United States Air Force Air Defense Command.

This medium-range search radar was designed and built by Bendix as a SAGE system gap-filler radar to provide low-altitude coverage. Operating in the S-band at a frequency between 2700 and 2900 MHz, the AN/FPS-14 could detect at a range of 65 miles.

The system was deployed in the late 1950s and 1960s at unmanned radar facilities (called "Gap Fillers") designed to fill the low-altitude gaps between manned long-range radar stations. Gaps in coverage existed due to the curvature of the Earth, mountains, hills, valleys, rivers, and so forth[clarification needed].

The typical unmanned gap-filler radar annex consisted of a small L-shaped cinder-block building, with the radar equipment and the data-transmission equipment in one section and one or more diesel generators in the other section. These unmanned gap-filler sites generally had a three-legged radar tower about 85 feet tall where the AN/FPS-14 Radar was mounted inside a radome.

In accordance with the Joint Electronics Type Designation System, the radar's "AN/FPS-14" designation represents the 14th design of an Army-Navy fixed radar(pulsed) electronic device for searching.

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

See also

Uses material from the Wikipedia article AN/FPS-14 Radar, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.