74 lines
28 KiB
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74 lines
28 KiB
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In this modern age of GPS and
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precision long-range radar, it’s difficult to imagine the difficulty of navigating an aircraft at four miles a minute in darkness across blackedout enemy territory using only dead reckoning, star fixes and maps.
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Thus it was hardly surprising that during WW2 the Luftwaffe adopted radio methods to guide night bombers to their targets in Britain. The story of the secret and silent ‘battle of the beams’ between the attackers who developed these specialised systems and the defenders who strove to disrupt them is one of the most fascinating in the history of short wave radio. It is a drama in which British radio amateurs played a pivotal role
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Lorenz
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2Q 2FWREHU LQ WKH ÀUVW DLU UDLG RQ Britain in WW2, a Heinkel He 111 medium ERPEHU ZDV VKRW GRZQ E\ D 6SLWÀUH RI Squadron over the Firth of Forth. When the plane’s radio equipment was taken to RAE Farnborough for examination, the technicians ZHUH VXUSULVHG WR ÀQG WKDW WKH /RUHQ] EOLQG approach receiver from the aircraft was a 7-valve superhet of much higher sensitivity than the 2-valve straight set that was adequate for normal service. Later, captured aircrew from another He 111 were overheard saying that no matter how diligently the British searched their plane WKH\ZRXOGQHYHUÀQGWKHLUERPELQJQDYLJDWLRQ equipment, implying that it would be overlooked because it was right under their noses. The blind approach system had been GHYHORSHG E\ WKH /RUHQ] &RPSDQ\ LQ %HUOLQ long before the outbreak of war and it had EHHQLQVWDOOHGDWPDQ\DLUÀHOGVWKURXJKRXWWKH world. The system initially used motor-driven switches to modulate the antenna lobes of a : 0+] 0&: WUDQVPLWWHU ORFDWHG at the end of the runway, such that if an aircraft were to the right of the approach path LWUHFHLYHGDVHULHVRI+]WRQHVHFRQG dashes, whereas if it were to the left it received VHFRQG GRWV 7KH GRWV DQG GDVKHV ZHUH synchronised, so that directly on the correct ÁLJKWSDWKWKH\PHUJHGLQDQHTXLVLJQDO]RQH
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Feature Battling the
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Radio Beams
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80 0D\
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Part 1: Headache and Aspirin
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The Knickebein beams from Kleve and Stollberg could be directed to intersect over targets such as the Rolls-Royce aero-engine factory at Derby. (Image: Dahnielson/cc by-sa 3.0).
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August 1941 photo of part of a 20m-high Knickebein transmitter antenna, possibly in Halinghen, Hauts-de-France. (Image: Bundesarchiv, Bild 101I-228-0322-04 / Friedrich Springorum / CC-BY-SA 3.0).
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Feature
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May 2020 81
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The crooked leg
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80 Wing
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,Q $XJXVW D UDGLR FRXQWHUPHDVXUHV XQLW FDOOHG1R 6LJQDOV :LQJZDVIRUPHGE\ VLJQDOV VSHFLDOLVW (GZDUG $GGLVRQ WR SURYLGH
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Dr Bruce Taylor, HB9ANY bgtaylor@ieee.org
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Restoring an aircraft Knickebein system (foreground). Left: EBL2 signal processing unit; Middle: EBL3 superhet beam receiver; Right: U8 210V HT rotary converter. (CDV&T and Hans Goulooze).
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Feature
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82 May 2020
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electronic intelligence and counter the German beams. Its motto was “Confusion to Our Enemies”. The Wing Headquarters was established in the Aldenham Lodge Hotel in Radlett, a village about 14 miles north west of London in convenient proximity to the London/ Birmingham GPO trunk cable. It was linked directly to the Fighter Command Operations Room at Bentley Priory in Stanmore. The old Lodge was infested with rats and cockroaches but it had a swimming pool, rather a rare asset for a WW2 RAF base! Because of their technical experience, resourcefulness and ability to improvise solutions rapidly, many British radio amateurs served in this unusual unit, with the General Secretary of the RSGB, John Clarricoats, G6CL, acting as a ‘Recruiting Sergeant’. Fifty BBC radio engineers also joined and within a year Addison had built up monitoring and jamming systems at over 120 outstations throughout the country. By September 1941, 80 Wing had a strength of 2000 men and
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women of all ranks. A staff of 27 WAAFs was engaged to use 242 telephone lines to connect the Radlett HQ with the outstations. Before specialised systems to counter Knickebein could be built, Addison’s team improvised makeshift jammers by commandeering 150W 27.12MHz diathermy sets from local hospitals. These were converted WR 5) SRZHU DPSOLÀHUV DQG GULYHQ E\ VPDOO transmitters made at the Peto Scott factory to emit radio noise on the Knickebein frequencies. Two sets were installed in vehicles that could rapidly be despatched to any target area. Others were installed in dispersed police stations, which were alerted by telephone from Wing HQ when they were required. One village bobby put a set in his bedroom, where his wife could switch it on if he was out on his beat at the time of a call. The Rediffusion factory in south-west London produced a number of powerful jammers very UDSLGO\E\FRQYHUWLQJWKHN:DXGLRDPSOLÀHUV on their production line into radio transmitters.
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:LQJDOVRPRGLÀHGHLJKW5$)/RUHQ]DLUÀHOG approach transmitters to radiate fake beams across the Knickebein ones to induce the attacking planes to stray off course, or to drop their bomb load in open country before reaching the target. The Air Arm of 80 Wing, which later became 6TXDGURQ FDUULHG RXW UHJXODU ÁLJKWV WR locate the radio beams. To narrow the search area for the Ansons, manned receiving stations were set up by lashing garden sheds to the tops of the towers of a few selected Chain Home radar stations. Braving the freezing cold in these high level shacks, the listening operators could indicate to Wing HQ the Knickebein frequencies that were being used on any night, and to which side of each station the beams lay. Knowing the antenna patterns of the Knickebein transmitters and their locations, the information from several such receiving stations could be combined to estimate the bearings of the main lobes. Since the beams were often turned on well before each night attack, this gave time to identify the probable target and set up the jammers. Meanwhile a more sophisticated antidote for Headache was being developed by Robert Cockburn and his team at the Telecommunications Research Establishment (TRE) in Worth Matravers, which included Martin Ryle, G3CY. This countermeasure was aptly named ‘Aspirin’. When a Knickebein raid started, the 500W Aspirins netted on to the frequency and transmitted dashes with the same modulation tone at exactly the same rate as the real transmitter. When the jamming signal was strong enough, pilots on the correct track continued to hear dashes, causing them to diverge from it. This even resulted in several ERPEHUV Á\LQJ LQ FLUFOHV QDYLJDWLRQ EHFDPH so unreliable that by mistake some German bombers landed in England instead of at their home bases. At least one inexperienced young bomber crew, who hadn’t been taught to navigate at night without the Knickebein beams, bailed out from their plane when they found they were jammed. When the start of systematic Aspirin jamming revealed that Knickebein had become well understood by the RAF, many German bomber pilots preferred to keep out of the beam VLQFHWKH\IHDUHG PLVWDNHQO\ WKDWQLJKWÀJKWHUV or aerial mines might be waiting for them all along the route to the target. This psychological effect may actually have caused more disruption than the jamming itself. By the autumn of 1940 raiders no longer considered Knickebein usable HQRXJK IRU WDUJHW LGHQWLÀFDWLRQ DOWKRXJK LW was several months before the young German pilots plucked up the courage to tell Göring that the system was useless. However, as we shall see in Part 2, the German Aviation Research Institute (DVL) had been developing another highly secret and much more accurate VHF radio beam system that would soon be used by the Luftwaffe with devastating effect.
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Hallicrafters S-27 amateur radio receivers were used to search for the Luftwaffe beams.
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After the occupation of the Netherlands and France, more compact second-generation 45m-wide FuSan721 Knickebein antennas could be used, as they could be sited nearer to Britain. (Model by Michael Kayser)
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Radio amateurs played a
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pivotal role in electronic countermeasures during WW2.
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In Part 1 we saw how the RAF used amateur radio receivers to discover the Knickebein system of radio beams that the Luftwaffe employed to guide its night bombers to targets in Britain. ‘Aspirin’ jammers for this ‘Headache’ had been developed by TRE and deployed successfully by 80 Wing, and the system was considered no longer usable for accurate navigation. But the enemy had other tricks waiting in the wings.
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X-Gerät
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On 6 November 1940 a raiding Heinkel III bomber that had suffered compass failure over England tried to return to its base in occupied France by using a radio beacon at Saint-Malo. But the beacon was being jammed by 80 Wing, so the crew became disorientated and instead of landing in Brittany the plane ran out of fuel and crash landed just offshore from the beach at West Bay in Dorset. British Army soldiers waded into the shallows and secured a rope around the fuselage, but then the Royal Navy arrived and claimed that because the plane was in the sea it was theirs to salvage. When the sailors towed it into deeper water to secure it to a ship, the rope parted and the plane sank to the bottom! In spite of this incident the waterlogged radio equipment on board the aircraft was recovered and sent to RAE Farnborough, where it was found to include a new type of bombing radio navigation aid called X-Gerät. This system was considerably more sophisticated than Knickebein, having both coarse and Àne director beams and 20 operating frequencies in the higher frequency range of 65-77MHz. The X-Gerät system also laid three very narrow crossbeams across the director beam prior to the target, which allowed the aircraft’s ground speed to be determined and the bomb release point to be computed by a special ‘bombing-clock’
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Feature Battling the
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Radio Beams
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82 June 2020
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Part 2: Bromide, Domino and Benjamin
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Locations of the radio beam transmitters in 1941. (Courtesy of Bill Rankin, www.afterthemap.info).
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7KHWKUHHGRUVDODQWHQQDPDVWVUHYHDOWKDWWKLV+HLQNHOZDVDQ;*HUlWSDWKÀQGHU
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June 2020 83
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mechanism on board the plane. The 0.05q Àne director beam was so narrow that in calculating its bearing 5-Àgure log tables had to be used to take account of the fact that the earth isn’t a perfect sphere (it’s slightly Áattened near the poles). A result of the antenna conÀguration required to achieve this high directivity was that the radiation pattern had 14 lobes, several of which the bombers had to Áy across to Ànd the true guide beam. The crossbeams also had multiple sidelobes, and as the Áight progressed the aircrew had to resolve the ambiguity by counting them until they reached the genuine Àrst marker beam. These sidelobes also complicated 80 Wing’s task of determining the target. Since the X-Gerät system required special equipment and trained aircrew operators, it was Àtted only to the bombers of an elite group of pathÀnders called Kampf Gruppe 100 (KGr100), whose task was to mark the target with hundreds of 1kg thermite incendiaries, on which the main force would bomb visually. But the poor ballistics of these incendiaries resulted in considerable spread and they didn’t have a special Áare colour to distinguish them from Àres caused by misdirected bombs. Learning from experience with Knickebein, the 500W X-Gerät transmitters emitted spoof beams before each raid, while the real ones weren’t turned on until as late as possible, a tactic that sometimes confused the bombers as much as the defenders. Fortunately for the Allies, KGr100 was based at Vannes, far to the west of France and beyond the reach of secure German military landlines, so the unit had to use wireless for ground communications. This allowed the control messages to be intercepted by the Y Service and radio amateur VIs and decrypted at Bletchley Park. With these decrypts, Jones was able to deduce how the operating frequencies were related to the receiver settings that were transmitted to the pathÀnders before each raid. Using this information, Cockburn’s team at TRE rapidly introduced 100W X-Gerät jammers called ‘Bromides’ that were equivalent to the Aspirins for Headaches. Nevertheless, Bromide proved ineffective during the devastating 10-hour raid on Coventry, even though the jammers at Birdlip Hill, near Gloucester, Kenilworth and Hagley were well within range. This was because their modulation tone was set to 1500Hz, whereas the X-Gerät receivers had a sharp audio Àlter centred on 2000Hz. The mistake was corrected before the raids on Birmingham Àve days later, when the Luftwaffe bombers were partially disrupted and dispersed. By April 1941, 80 Wing had enough Bromides to disrupt all the X-Gerät director and crossbeam frequencies
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and no other inland British city was to suffer such highly concentrated damage. In spite of at least eight attacks on the Rolls-Royce works at Derby during WW2, only a single bomb actually hit a factory building. Except on moonless or cloudy nights, no radio aids were required to Ànd the sprawling metropolis of London. But speciÀc industrial assets in the city couldn’t be targeted accurately without the help of reliable beams and the enemy bomb loads were scattered over almost 100 boroughs. Although no longer used by raiding bombers, the 6577MHz X-Gerät transmitters were kept functioning as decoys until they were Ànally dismantled in November 1942.
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Y-Gerät
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As early as mid-1940, when the existence of the Knickebein beams was conÀrmed, Enigma decrypts from Bletchley Park included mention of what appeared to be another system, code-named ‘Wotan’. Since this is the name of a Germanic God with only one eye, Jones guessed that it might refer to a new navigation aid that used only a single beam. It turned out that this reasoning was wrong but the conclusion was perfectly correct! Monitoring stations began to report beam signals between 42.1 and 47.9MHz that had different characteristics, with alternate right and left signals of equal duration transmitted at a high rate, for they were decoded in the aircraft electronically rather than aurally. The bearing analyser was coupled to the modiÀed He 111 autopilot by an automatic Áight control system that was much ahead of its time. This more advanced ‘Y-Gerät’ system reduced the number of confusing sidelobes by switching between a cardioid and a more directive antenna pattern. It achieved very accurate slant ranging by transmitting a 300Hz, 3kHz or 7.5kHz tonemodulated carrier to a transponder in the aircraft
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on one frequency, and comparing the phase with the return signal carrying the same modulation sent back from the aircraft on a different one. The range measurement was made by the ground controller, who used a version of the X-Gerät stopclock to determine when to order the aircraft to release its bombs. Since the system was more complex and could only operate with Àve aircraft at a time, Y-Gerät equipped planes were formed into a specialised pathÀnder group (Group III of KG26) that led the main bomber stream. III/KG26 made the error of practising using Y-Gerät for many weeks before trying it on a major bombing raid. So Cockburn’s team had time to analyse the signals and devise a subtle countermeasure called ‘Domino’, which was ready for action on the very Àrst night that the system was used for a large-scale attack on Britain. They borrowed the powerful BBC TV transmitter at Alexandra Palace, which by chance operated in the same frequency band and had been shut down at the outbreak of war lest it be used by the Luftwaffe to home on London. An EMI TV receiver was set up at the former outside broadcast relay station at Swains Lane in Highgate, with its bandwidth enlarged to accept both the ground control transmission on 42.5MHz and the response from the pathÀnder bomber on 46.9MHz. From there, the modulation signal was sent by Post OfÀce landline to Alexandra Palace, together with a subdivision of the carrier frequency that allowed the TV transmitter to zero beat with the ground transmission. At Swains Lane Ewart Farvis sat listening to the German radio communications with his Ànger on a key that controlled Alexandra Palace remotely. At the critical moment, he sent the modulation back to the aircraft on 42.5MHz, using a power that was sufÀcient to give a false range indication but not enough to arouse suspicion of jamming. Thirty years after the event, when Farvis Ànally felt free to tell me about this secret war work, he described the result as hilarious. Being Áuent in German, he could follow the acrimonious radio dialogue between the bewildered young bomber aircrew and their ground controller as they argued about the cause of the perplexing behaviour of their instruments. The aircrew accused the ground station of sending bad signals, while the ground controller attributed the problems to airborne equipment failure, probably due to a loose wire. He even told the distraught operator to “thump the box”, which caused Farvis to remark that he was evidently a real radio man! The jamming was repeated successfully with more pathÀnders before the Luftwaffe abandoned the attack. At TRE, Farvis went on to analyse the signals of the German VHF IdentiÀcation, Friend or Foe
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Dr Bruce Taylor, HB9ANY bgtaylor@ieee.org
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The X-Gerät ‘bombing-clock’ measured the time WRÁ\EHWZHHQWZRFURVVEHDPVWRGHWHUPLQHWKH bomb release time. (Horst Beck Collection, photo Frank Dörenberg, N4SPP/F4WCN).
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Feature
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(IFF) system, allowing the team to develop the ‘Perfectos’ radio device that RAF night Àghters used to trigger the transponders in enemy aircraft, to determine their positions without using radar. Following the deployment of Perfectos, many Luftwaffe crews Áew with their IFF switched off and were shot down by their own side’s Áak. After the capitulation of Germany, Farvis was given the temporary rank of Squadron Leader (and a revolver) when he was Áown to Munich to interrogate German engineers and scientists. He had a fruitful discussion with the designer of X-Gerät and Y-Gerät, Johannes Plendl.
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Benjamin
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Having established an effective countermeasure for the ranging system of Y-Gerät, Cockburn lost no time in manufacturing production versions of Domino, which could also deal with rapid frequency changes that were sometimes made in the middle of an operation. Although a Domino station on Beacon Hill near Salisbury was attacked by a small force of bombers it was soon back on the air and, during the Àrst two weeks of March 1941, only 18 aircraft of 89 Y-Gerät sorties received the bomb-release signal. Domino was an effective but complex countermeasure, requiring two-way communication between jammer and aircraft. But Cockburn soon found that Y-Gerät navigation could be disrupted by an even simpler form of jamming. When three Heinkel bombers were shot down during a raid over Liverpool in May 1941, the vulnerability of their Y-Gerät signal analyser was studied in detail at Farnborough. It was found that a short gap between the pair of direction signals was essential for the electronic bearing-analyser to lock to the beam. By Àlling in this gap by transmitting a continuous note on the beam frequency, the analyser unlocked and gave no useful indication. Within three weeks 80 Wing had a new jammer on the air that used this technique, and Àve more were operational before the end of the month. Cockburn called it ‘Benjamin’ (for ‘Ben jamming’, since Benito was the British codename for Y-Gerät). The Luftwaffe eventually realised that Y-Gerät had been compromised from the Àrst day that it was used. Bomber pilots no longer put any faith in wireless navigation aids, making the accurate night bombing of inland targets very difÀcult. In one raid the crews that thought they had bombed Nottingham dropped their weapons in open country 15 miles east of the city, killing two chickens with 230
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Conclusion
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In his memoirs on the Battle of Britain, Churchill wrote one sentence about the vitally important role of radar, but eight pages on the German radio beams. Were it not for Jones, Scott-Farnie, Cockburn, Farvis, TRE, 80 Wing and the efforts of numerous dedicated radio amateurs, there would undoubtedly have been many more instances like the destruction of Coventry. Without effective electronic countermeasures, concentrated pin-point bombing might well have destroyed the British aero-engine and SpitÀre factories, changing the course of the war. In a light-hearted tribute at the end of the conÁict, he wrote, “You certainly did pull the crooked leg”.
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Correction
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The Knickebein antenna shown on page 80 (May) is of the compact type and isn’t 60m high. The total distance from the bottom to the top of the stacked dipoles is less than 10m, which makes the total height of the structure less than 20m above ground. Even the giant antenna at Stollberg Hill was much less than 60m high, although it was 90m wide. The photo on page 82 isn’t a Knickebein antenna, although it does bear a resemblance. The one shown doesn’t have the ‘crooked leg’ angle characteristic of Knickebein. It is instead a photo of a ‘Bernhard’ radio navigational beacon, which had no connection with the bombing beams.
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The Alexandra Palace TV transmitter was used to disrupt Y-Gerät on 42.5MHz. (Photo based on Duncan Harris/CC-BY-2.0).
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7KH&RDOYLOOH2XWVWDWLRQRI:LQJRQWKHÁLJKWSDWKWR'HUE\KDG$VSLULQ to jam Knickebein, two Bromides for X-Gerät and Benjamin for Y-Gerät. ,Q/RXJKERURXJK$5&RSHUDWHG*%&+*IURPWKHVLWH &KDUOH\ +HULWDJH*URXS%OXHVN\*RRJOH(DUWK
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84 June 2020
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high explosive bombs, one oil bomb and !ve sticks of 36 incendiaries. In some raids bombing was so scattered over the southern counties of England that it was impossible to deduce the intended target until it was revealed by the crews of downed bombers. Meanwhile, the tide of war began to turn. The experience of 80 Wing proved invaluable when the Allies began to take the !ght to the enemy and in the summer of 1942 the RAF used radio beams to guide the bombing of the Krupp arms factory in a precision night attack through ten-tenths cloud.
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We apologise to Dr Taylor for the following errors that were introduced into Part 1 of this feature.
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A downed Heinkel 111 pathfinder.
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