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Old 05-06-2013, 09:18 AM
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earlyfilm earlyfilm is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Culpeper, VA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve McVoy View Post
An employee of a Canadian television station has found an unusual TV camera, possibly from World War Two
The first problem, would be the Iconoscope cameras required lots of light, so that would eliminate all except daylight flights. During war time, one would not want a TV signal transmitted from a plane acting as a direction finder for the enemy anti-aircraft guns, and there were no video recorders at the time. I think this eliminates it being made for in-flight combat use.

The newly invented and secret Norden bombsight required the bombardier to fly the plane during the bombing run. The US Army Air Force correctly thought this might be rather dangerous during bombardier training if the bombardier messed up.

The first trainers were actual tall carts where the bombardier rode over a painted surface and used an optical simulated bombsight. This training proved to be not realistic enough.

They then build a realistic miniature of German sites and had the new bombardiers train by "flying" a remote controlled TV camera over the miniature landscape in a studio. The camera marked the hits and misses in real time.

Could the Canadians have made one also?

I remember these US AAF devices being written up in Popular Mechanics during WWII and the US Government also made a propaganda film for distribution to theaters on the TV system during the war.

A quick search of the internet only found images of the crude early ones.

Jas.

Last edited by earlyfilm; 05-06-2013 at 09:49 AM. Reason: Norden was spelled wrong
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