Stona, Milosh,
FuG 101a had the two ranges with the lower one very useful for blind landing, the FuG 101 had only the coarse one.
The FuG 101 and its mechanical FM techniques was used as a basis of a proximity fuse for bombs called MARABU. The allies expected this and had developed techniques they thought would pre detonate it.
Basically a rapidly rotating motor was used to alter the frequency of a transmitter. By mixing the transmitted frequency (transmitted on say the left wing) with the received from a ground reflection (say on the right one) the phase difference indicated altitude.
I rather suspect MARABU would be a lot cheaper than FuG 101a and perhaps if only say +/-30m accuracy was required a cheaper device or a device working on different principles might do. German electronics engineers were very busy with anti jamming measures and developing a new generation of microwave radar at this time.
The accuracy of Barometric instruments would I think be adequate to go down to 100ft. I believe altimeters work reasonably well to 20ft and might be relied upon so long as one had good topographic maps.
FuG 101a had the two ranges with the lower one very useful for blind landing, the FuG 101 had only the coarse one.
The FuG 101 and its mechanical FM techniques was used as a basis of a proximity fuse for bombs called MARABU. The allies expected this and had developed techniques they thought would pre detonate it.
Basically a rapidly rotating motor was used to alter the frequency of a transmitter. By mixing the transmitted frequency (transmitted on say the left wing) with the received from a ground reflection (say on the right one) the phase difference indicated altitude.
I rather suspect MARABU would be a lot cheaper than FuG 101a and perhaps if only say +/-30m accuracy was required a cheaper device or a device working on different principles might do. German electronics engineers were very busy with anti jamming measures and developing a new generation of microwave radar at this time.
The accuracy of Barometric instruments would I think be adequate to go down to 100ft. I believe altimeters work reasonably well to 20ft and might be relied upon so long as one had good topographic maps.
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