Armstrong, Ontario

1958 – Historical Report – USAF Historical Division


Historical Record
914th AC&W Squadron
Armstrong, Ontario
1 October 1958 to 31 December 1958

Section I

REQUIRED DATA

  1. Unit and Location

914th Aircraft Control & Warning Squadron
(ADC) Armstrong, Ontario, Canada

  1. Name and Grade of Commander

Wilfred A Hafner, Major, USAF

  1. Chain of Command (Superior Echelons)
  2. Headquarters United States Air Force
    Headquarters Air Defense Command
    Headquarters Eastern Air Defense Force
    37th Air Division (Defense)
    914th Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron

  • Subordinate Units (Down to and including squadrons)
  • None

  • Mission (Give authority and brief statement of primary mission)
  • The mission of this squadron is to operate and maintain a Direction Center facility as part of the integrated Air Defense System of the 37th Air Division (Defense) for the purpose of conducting Air Defense Operations within this system. Authority: 37th Air Division Regulation 24-17, dated 16 January 1958, and 37th Air Division Regulation 24-17A, dated 21 April 1958.

  • Personnel
  •    

    Officers

    Airmen

    Civilians

    Total

     
     

    Assigned

    15

    156

    18

    189

     
     

    Attached

    0

    0

    0

    0

     
                 
  • Equipment (Give official nomenclature and quantity of mission-type equipment)
  • AN/FPS-3C Prime Search Radar; AN/FPS-502 Medium Power, Medium Range Search Radar (Back-up); AN/TPS-502 Height Finder; AN/GPA-30 Video Mapper; AN/VPX-6 Interrogator Responder (IFF); AN/GPX-501 IFF AN/FPS-502; AN/GPX-7 IFF AN/FPS-3; AN/EPS-T2 Target Reproducer; AN/UPS-T5 Target Simulator; AN/GPA-37 Jamming Simulator; NE-612 Telephone Central Office; 2 each TT/F6 Teletypewriter.

    Section II

    COMMENTARY

    Situation:

    On 4 Dec 1957, the Joint Chiefs of Staff approved a "Plan for Phase 1 of the Evaluation of ECM Effectiveness". Reference (SM-856-57)

    Test to be conducted in the general area of 37th Air Division, with support from the 30th and 31st Air Divisions.

    914th Squadron, Armstrong, Ontario, Canada, was assigned as a Prime Radar Site in support of above.

    Objectives:

    Survey Squadron and determine what additional needs we might have to support a mission of the magnitude indicated above. Result – request three additional scopes, two skilled or expert directors, Dickie-fix for Counter Electronic Measures, a newer height finder. Obtained two OA-99 scopes and two skilled controllers.

    Pick and train a "first" or "Tiger" team to train and handle the WSEG mission. This team was formed as per 37th AD instructions and was composed of the best qualified personnel assigned to the operations section. The first team concept is still employed for large missions.

    Mission Training:

    Prior to the WSEG element test the 37th AD conducted two concentrated training periods known as Phase I and Phase II.

    Each phase was for a period of 15 days.

    Large numbers of target aircraft was employed. No target information was available for defending forces.

    Operations Plan 2-58, 37th AD, dated 18 April 1958, was the "Bible" for all defending forces.

    During these training missions the "faker" forces used the deceptive tactics used by the BADF Tactical Evaluation Team.

    The 914th Squadron was able to maintain an average of over 70% of MA’s to intercepts attempted.

    WSEG Element List:

    During the seven week period of the actual WSEG test period this squadron attempted 15 intercepts with 12 MA’s with a final average of 80%.

    Conclusions:

    From the results of training and the actual WSEG test, it is apparent that the present operational procedures are in general adequate for large work loads and that after a brief learning period, system performance steadily improves as training opportunities increase.

    Typed Name and Grade of Commander

    Wilfred A Hafner, Major, USAF

    Signature