Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,254 pages of information and 244,496 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Difference between revisions of "Decca Radar"

From Graces Guide
 
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The [[Decca Record Co]], a British gramophone manufacturer and record producer, contributed to the British war effort during the Second World War especially with the Decca Navigator system which resulted in a number of commercial ventures after the war, in particular the [[Decca Navigator Co]] and [[Decca Radar]] companies.
The [[Decca Record Co]], a British gramophone manufacturer and record producer, contributed to the British war effort during the Second World War especially with the Decca Navigator system which resulted in a number of commercial ventures after the war, in particular the [[Decca Navigator Co]] and [[Decca Radar]] companies.


1950 Decca Radar launched its first marine radar, the 159, in 1950. (The radar was named after the number of the London bus that passed the Brixton laboratory where the radar was designed and manufactured).  
1947 [[Edward Fennessy]] he developed a simple marine radar<ref>The Times, December 18, 2009</ref>
 
1950 '''Decca Radar''' launched its first marine radar, the 159, in 1950. (The radar was named after the number of the London bus that passed the Brixton laboratory where the radar was designed and manufactured). Fennessy became the first MD of the company.


1954 Introduction of airfield control radar, designed for use with jets, and cloud avoidance radar for use in commercial airliners<ref>The Times, 11 March 1954</ref>.
1954 Introduction of airfield control radar, designed for use with jets, and cloud avoidance radar for use in commercial airliners<ref>The Times, 11 March 1954</ref>.
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1958 Development of Doppler radar which was integrated with Navigator and conventional radar.  Sales of tape units for computers. Development of ''Deccafax'' closed circuit audio and visual communication system<ref>The Times, 11 March 1958</ref>.
1958 Development of Doppler radar which was integrated with Navigator and conventional radar.  Sales of tape units for computers. Development of ''Deccafax'' closed circuit audio and visual communication system<ref>The Times, 11 March 1958</ref>.


1961 Manufacturers of radar instruments, including a new marine radar set designed for small ships, called the "Deeca 212".
1961 Manufacturers of radar instruments, including a new marine radar set designed for small ships, called the "Decca 212".  Moved into military and civil aviation.
 
1965 [[Plessey Co]] acquired the company's non-marine radar system activities.


1968 Queen's Award to Industry for Technological Innovation
1968 Queen's Award to Industry for Technological Innovation

Latest revision as of 17:32, 30 July 2017

Sept 1953.
1959.Display Unit of River Radar Installation.
1961. 16 in true motion display console.
Feb 1962.
1962.

of Brixton Road, London and, later, New Malden, Surrey

The Decca Record Co, a British gramophone manufacturer and record producer, contributed to the British war effort during the Second World War especially with the Decca Navigator system which resulted in a number of commercial ventures after the war, in particular the Decca Navigator Co and Decca Radar companies.

1947 Edward Fennessy he developed a simple marine radar[1]

1950 Decca Radar launched its first marine radar, the 159, in 1950. (The radar was named after the number of the London bus that passed the Brixton laboratory where the radar was designed and manufactured). Fennessy became the first MD of the company.

1954 Introduction of airfield control radar, designed for use with jets, and cloud avoidance radar for use in commercial airliners[2].

The company held a position at the forefront of commercial marine radar technology, producing the first true motion radar, the first anti-collision radar and the first "Type Approved" colour radar.

1957 Racal's work on the "electric" computer had been slowed but continued development of high speed tape transports for use with computers[3].

1958 Development of Doppler radar which was integrated with Navigator and conventional radar. Sales of tape units for computers. Development of Deccafax closed circuit audio and visual communication system[4].

1961 Manufacturers of radar instruments, including a new marine radar set designed for small ships, called the "Decca 212". Moved into military and civil aviation.

1965 Plessey Co acquired the company's non-marine radar system activities.

1968 Queen's Award to Industry for Technological Innovation

1980 Racal won a battle with GEC to acquire Decca Ltd[5]. Decca Radar became Racal-Decca.

Early Racal-Decca radars had dropped the Decca name which mariners had trusted for years, but outcry from marine customers prompted its return. At this time the business was run from New Malden in Surrey, UK.

In the mid-1980s, Decca introduced the BridgeMaster series of radars, which used a rasterized colour display. The BridgeMaster II series followed, with a Motorola 68000 CPU and powerful software options such as vector traces showing the trajectories of other ships as part of the ARPA package.


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Times, December 18, 2009
  2. The Times, 11 March 1954
  3. The Times, 3 April 1957
  4. The Times, 11 March 1958
  5. The Times, 15 February 1980