CPS-6 - Medium range combination search and height finder Radar Set. Manufactured by General Electric Corporation. Two separate antennas, one for early warning (EW) detection and the other slanted 45 degrees to provide target height (HF). Initially, the radar was designed to detect fighter aircraft at 100 miles and 16,000 feet. The HF radar used five transmitters that operated at S-band frequencies ranging from 2700 to 3019 MHz to detect target altitude. Variants included the CPS-6, CPS-6A, and the CPS-6B. The CPS-6B was the most widely used of the variants.
CPS-6B/FPS-10 Combination Search and Height Finder Radar Facility.
Adapted From MIL-HDBK-162A:
Radar Set CPS-6 is a fixed-station, air transportable, high-power, long-range search and height-finding radar that is used for aircraft early warning and GCI applications. This radar set has a maximum range of 265 naut mi and a height-finding capability of 40,000 ft. Facilities are provided for use of advanced filter techniques that eliminate the time lag inherent in passing plots through a filter room. The CPS-6 has provisions for optional use of video mapping, direction finding, and identification equipment. Terminal facilities are also provided for voice, code or teletype, and radio or wire communications. This radar set is equipped with moving target indication and many remote operating facilities.
Radar Set FPS-10 is similar to Radar Set CPS-6B, differing only in the number of indicators used in the absence of B-scan indicators, and in the telephone system. The CPS-6B has more indicators, and its telephone system is supplied as part of the equipment.
One CPS-6B radar unit and its ancillary electronic equipment required eighty-five freight cars for transport. The Air Force phased out the 6B model between mid-1957 and mid-1959.
CPS-6 Deployments
At least 8 of the basic model CPS-6 Radar were deployed in the Lashup System and the early Permanent System. In the Lashup System they were deployed one to each site but in the Permanent System, they were deployed in pairs, two sets to each site. One was identified as the search radar and one as a height-finder.
At least 18 of the model CPS-6B Radar sets were deployed to Permanent System radar sites and two were used at Keesler Technical Training Center for hands-on training. In the Permanent System, they were deployed in pairs, two sets to each site. One was identified as the search radar and one as a height-finder.
Winkler, David F., Searching the Skies: the Legacy of the United States Cold War Defense Radar Program, USAF Hq Air Combat Command, 1997, 192 pages, Pdf, page 75-76