Othello Air Force Station: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1951-1975) - A [[Cold War]] long range U.S. Air Force Radar Station first established in 1951 near Othello, Adams County, Washington. Named Othello Air Force Station after the nearby town. Initially assigned a Permanent ID of P-40 and later a Sage ID of Z-40. Abandoned in 1975. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1951-1975) - A [[Cold War]] long range U.S. Air Force Radar Station first established in 1951 near Othello, Adams County, Washington. Named Othello Air Force Station after the nearby town. Initially assigned a Permanent ID of P-40 and later a Sage ID of Z-40. Abandoned in 1975. | ||
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Revision as of 19:35, 22 February 2015
Othello Air Force Station (1951-1975) - A Cold War long range U.S. Air Force Radar Station first established in 1951 near Othello, Adams County, Washington. Named Othello Air Force Station after the nearby town. Initially assigned a Permanent ID of P-40 and later a Sage ID of Z-40. Abandoned in 1975. History of Othello Air Force Station![]() ![]() Established in September 1951 with the relocation of the 637th AC&W Squadron to the newly constructed radar station. Initial equipment included the FPS-3 search radar and an FPS-5 height finder radar. The radar equipment evolved into an FPS-3 search radar with two FPS-6 height finder radars while the site was still a manual Ground Control Intercept (GCI) site. The physical plant of the site was divided into a main site, a housing area and a radio site. The main site housed the operations building, the radar towers, the enlisted barracks, the bachelor officer's quarters, the orderly room, the chow hall, the motor pool and the backup generators. Just outside the main gate was an NCO club. Across Radar Road (now Sage Road) from the main site was a small housing area for critical married personnel. North of the main site was a separate radio site housing radio equipment for directing aircraft intercepts. The transition to the automated SAGE system began with installation of the GPA-37 analog intercept control system which allowed local controllers to vector interceptors to their targets. Operation of the GPA-37 continued even as the site was being upgraded for the automated SAGE system with the FST-2 installation and the search radar upgrade to the FPS-20. The FST-2 equipment digitized the radar returns and transmitted the digital returns to the SAGE direction center. Under the SAGE system interceptor aircraft were directed to their targets by the direction center computers and controllers greatly reducing the need for local controllers and equipment at every radar station. The site began operation as a SAGE site on 15 Mar 1960 initially feeding the Larson SAGE Direction Center DC-15 at nearby Larson AFB. With the closure of DC-15 in 1963 Othello was connected to the McChord SAGE Direction Center DC-12 direction center at McChord AFB. The search radar was upgraded to an FPS-7C and an FPS-26A height finder radar was installed in 1963-64. Othello AFS was responsible for the maintenance of two remote unattended gap filler radar sites. The gap filler sites were place in locations where the main search radar lacked coverage. These sites sent digitized radar target data directly to a direction center. Maintenance teams were dispatched from Othello AFS for regularly scheduled maintenance or when fault indicators suggested the site had problems. In the following years Othello AFS was selected as a Backup Interceptor Control (BUIC) site to backup the Sage direction center in case of failure. BUIC I operations began in 1962 and ended 1 Mar 66. BUIC III operations began in the late 1960s. As the threat from Russian aircraft attack changed to a missile threat the need for the backup BUIC systems evaporated and it was deactivated in 1974. Othello AFS and the 637th were deactivated on 31 Mar 1975 as the need for the SAGE system itself was reduced.
Current StatusPrivate property near Othello, Adams County, Washington.
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Links: Visited: 13 Oct 2010 |