- AN/ART-13
The AN/ART-13 was a
radio transmitter manufactured byCollins Radio that found widespread use during and afterWorld War II inmilitary aircraft .History
In 1940 the Collins Radio Company designed a new radio transmitter for the
US Navy . The transmitter, Navy designation ATC, was later re-designated under the Joint Army-Navy (JAN) system as T-47/ART-13. TheArmy Air Force adopted a slightly improved version as the T-47A/ART-13, most made byStewart-Warner . The USAAF matched the AN/ART-13A with theBC-348 receiver, whose -R and -Q models were known under the JAN system as the AN/ARR-11. The resulting communications system was known as the AN/ARC-8 and was the liaison radio set on many larger USAAF aircraft beginning late in WWII. Some were still in service in the early 1970s.The earlier AN/ART-13 was widely used in post-WWII Navy aircraft, being paired up post-WWII with the Navy's AN/ARR-15 auto-tune receiver. The resulting communcations system was known as the AN/ARC-25. Its replacement began with the Collins AN/ARC-38 AM transceiver in the early 1950s, which in turn was upgraded to the AN/ARC-38A USB transceiver in the late 1950s. The Russians made nearly exact copies of the AN/ART-13 transmitter for use on their military aircraft. It is thought that they obtained AN/ART-13 units from battle damaged
B-29 bombers that landed in Russia during World War II. It was well known that the Russians copied the B-29 bomber calling their version the Tu-4.Enola Gay , theB-29 Superfortress bomber that dropped "Little Boy ", the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan was equipped with the AN/ARC-8 combination. [http://aafradio.org/flightdeck/b29.htm AAFRadio - U.S. Military Aircraft Avionics from 1939 to 1945 ] The AN/ART-13 is used today by ham radio operators interested in operating historic military gear. It is often paired with aBC-348 military receiver of World War II vintage or the later AN/ARR-15 autotuned receiver of postwar vintage. [http://www.collinsclubs.com/carc/b-29/radio.html B-29 Radio Project, Collins Amateur Radio Club]Performance
The AN/ART-13 operated in CW (code), MCW and AM (voice) modes and covered LF, MF and HF
frequencies up to 18.1MHz . It had ten autotunedVFO tuned channels that could be preset. Post-war modifications by COMCO and other companies added crystal frequency control capability and were approved for use on civil airliners. Power output was approximately 100watt s using an 813vacuum tube as the finalamplifier . Under favorable atmospheric conditions communications could be established betweenaircraft and ground stations separated by thousands of miles.ee also
*
ARC-5
*BC-348
*BC-654
*Collins Radio
*R-390A
*Wireless Set No. 19
*Vintage amateur radio References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.