One
Saturday evening in the early 1960s our dinner bridge group assembled
at the home of Dee and Claude Wilmuth. The bar was open, accompanied
by an assortment of cocktail snacks. Claude announced that he
had another snack to offer and invited us to witness its creation
in his new $600 corn popper. He had satisfied Dee’s longing
for a microwave oven but at this point had only mastered the techniques
of popping corn and producing nachos. The Radar Range, first introduced
as a cooking method in 1952 at around $1300, was now more affordable
at the $600 level.
Two
Birmingham University scientists, Sir John Randall and Dr. H.
A. Boot, perfected Radar to detect German aircraft during the
Battle of Britain and in cooperation with US scientists advanced
it to become the most sophisticated detection device to come out
of Word War II. Radar became airborne on every B29 in the 20th
Air Force and made possible the night napalm raids on Japanese
industrial centers and daylight bombing of targets obscured by
10/10-cloud cover. It was also an efficient navigation tool, providing
fixes in seconds, bouncing off and recovering azimuth and distance
signals from targets enroute. The heart of Radar was the magnetron,
which produced the ultra high frequency microwave signal.
The
magnetron became the subject of continuing research and Dr. John
Spencer of Raytheon was in the process of a test in 1946. He took
a break and reached for a chocolate bar in his pocket only to
discover that it had turned to chocolate syrup. This was puzzling
since neither the room temperature nor body heat could have caused
the bar to melt. Could energy from the magnetron be the cause?
In searching for the answer he placed some unpopped corn in front
of the magnetron tube. The kernels popped and arced to the floor.
This experiment gave rise to a peacetime application of a wartime
tool and revolutionized food preparation.
Airborne
Radar was a highly classified program in WWII Trainees at the
Boca Raton AFB did not mention the word “Radar”, were
not allowed to bring writing material into the classroom, and
were issued no written material on operation of the system. Everything
was committed to memory. In time Radar Observers constructed their
own files from technical orders from the manufacturer and releases
developed at the Operations level. There were constant charges
that all the material in our possession was top secret and should
be guarded accordingly. On the intercom the Radar position was
dubbed “Mickey”. The word “Radar” was
not to be used lest it be broadcast in error.
The
early trainees were almost all non commissioned officers, mostly
gunners who had attained a high level of flying experience. The
policy changed early in the program. It was determined that the
operators of the system would be rated navigators or bombardiers
to utilize fully the potential of this weapon. Most Radar Observers
in the 20th were commissioned navigators who became specialists
in Radar Navigation and Bombing. The Military Occupational Specialty
(MOS) designation was HAB/BTO, which stood for “High Altitude
Bombardment/Bomb Through Overcast”. It took on an added
meaning among the crews, “High Altitude Bookkeeper/Big Time
Operator”. Many enlisted personnel kept their jobs as Radar
Operators. In fact, the Radar Operator on the Enola Gay was Sgt.
Joseph S. Stiborik.
Leaving
Mather Field for Hickham on Oahu in March 1945 the Radar was set
at a range of 100 nautical miles. My attention was focused on
the California coastline behind us. I took one last fix before
it vanished from the screen. Within a short time I began to receive
echoes on the screen that resembled small islands. There were
no landmasses on the route so I went forward and looked in the
direction of the signals. I soon realized I was picking up the
bases of moisture-laden clouds.
In my eight-month experience with Radar, mainly in winter months,
I had yet to come upon the type of cloud that could develop over
water in the spring and summer months. Radar became a revolutionary
tool in the science of weather forecasting. Instead of scanning
downward from the aircraft, weather Radar is directed upward into
the atmosphere and can produce accurate images of weather systems.
Only the heavy moisture laden clouds provide a signal.
On
a mission late in our tour this capability worked against us.
On turning at the IP the aiming point on the screen looked nothing
like it was supposed to. The bombardier reported heavy thunderstorms
in the direction we were headed. I realized they were producing
echoes over the target area, altering the radar image. I drew
an imaginary line from unobstructed coastline left and right of
the aiming point and trusted that our drift calculation was correct.
The strike photos showed excellent results so it worked. We trusted
our ability to beat the weather so much that there was no alternate
target designated. Radar could detect soft spots in front lines
allowing us to alter course and pass through them with minimum
turbulence. We were only able to do this on the way back to base.
On the way to the target, a strict course and airspeed had to
be flown to space us properly over the target.
Over
the years I had hoped to find some Radar Scope photos of a bomb
run. It wasn’t until mid 2002 that they became available.
Captain Ralph Weston learned of the 39th Bomb Group Association
web site and furnished a series of nine scope photos of a bomb
run against the City of Nishinomiya, located on a neck of land
between Kobe and Osaka. The raid took place in the last hour of
August 5 and the first hour of August 6, 1945. Captain Weston
was the Airplane Commander of Crew P41, 62nd Squadron, 39th Bomb
Group, 314th Wing.
By
today’s standards the procedure we used must be regarded
as primitive. The Korean War saw the introduction of smart bombs
making our way obsolete. However it was a state of the art tool
in Air Offensive Japan 1945.
It
is a part of History and worth preserving. I have found little
or nothing at all on this subject in libraries and web sites.
The availability of the scope photos has motivated me to record
this contribution to the conclusion of World War II. This account
is constructed almost entirely from memory. Readers are encouraged
to correct and add to the information presented.
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