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{{Short description|Circular antenna for radio direction finding}}
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[[File:NSGA Galeta Island Site.jpg|thumb|Direction-finding system [[Galeta Island (Panama)|Galeta Island]], [[Panama]] ]]
Many such CDAA systems are used by many nations, such as the former [[Soviet Union]] and modern-day [[Russia]], [[Germany]], the [[United Kingdom]], and the [[United States]].
==History==
===Origin in World War II Germany===
The first ''Wullenwever'' was built during the war at Skibsby, north-east of the city of [[Hjørring]] (in German: Hjörring), Denmark ({{coord|57|
===Post-war development===
Although Pietzner, Schellhoss, and Wächtler retired in West Germany, some of their second-echelon technicians were taken to the [[USSR]] after the war. At least 30
The array in Skibsby was extensively studied by the British
One of the German antenna researchers, Dr. Rolf Wundt, was one of hundreds of German scientists taken to the U.S. by the Army after the war under [[Operation Paperclip]]. He arrived in New York in March 1947 on the same ship as [[Wernher
Professor Edgar Hayden, then a young engineer in the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|University of Illinois]] Radio Direction Finding Research Group, led the reassembly of the ''Wullenweber'', studied the design and performance of [[HF/DF]] arrays and researched the physics of HF/DF under contract to the U.S. Navy from 1947 through 1960.
Hayden led the design and development of a large
===The 1960s–1970s construction boom and subsequent demolition===
In 1959, the U.S. Navy contracted with [[ITT Corporation|ITT]] Federal Systems to deploy a worldwide network of [[AN/FRD-10]] HF/DF arrays based on lessons learned from the Bondville experimental array.
[[File:Sobe Communications Site.jpg|thumb|left|CDAA at US Navy Sobe Communications base, [[Yomitan]], [[Okinawa Prefecture|Okinawa]], Japan]]
The FRD-10 at NSGA Hanza, Okinawa was the first installed, in 1962, followed by eleven additional arrays, with the last completed in 1964 at NRRF Imperial Beach, CA. (Silver Strand) which was demolished in 2014. Due to their immense size, the ___location of the Bondville array ({{coord|40.0494|N|88.3807|W|scale:2000}}) and the other post-war
Also in 1959, a contract to build a larger
The first FLR-9 was installed at [[RAF Chicksands]] ({{coord|52.0443|N|0.389182|W|scale:5000}}) in the United Kingdom in 1962. The second FLR-9 was installed at [[San Vito dei Normanni Air Station]] ({{coord|40.64700|N|17.83900|E|scale:5000}}), Italy also in 1962. Following base closures, the arrays at Chicksands and San Vito were dismantled in 1996 and 1993, respectively.
[[File:CDAA Elmendorf AFB.PNG|thumb|left|FLR-9
A second contract was awarded to Sylvania to install AN/FLR-9 systems at [[Misawa AB]], Japan; [[Clark AB]], Philippine Islands; Pakistan (never built); [[Elmendorf AFB]], Alaska; and Karamürsel AS, Turkey. The last two were completed in 1966. The Karamürsel AS was closed and array was dismantled in 1977 in retribution for the suspension of U.S. military aid to Turkey. The Clark AB array was decommissioned after the Mt. Pinatubo volcano eruption in 1991. It was later converted into an outdoor amphitheater which is part of the [[Nayong Pilipino Clark]] theme park. Demolition of the Misawa FLR-9 began in October 2014.
A pair of FRD-10s not equipped for HF/DF were installed in 1969 at NAVRADSTA(R) Sugar Grove, WV ({{coord|38.5129|N|79.2790|W|scale:5000}}), for naval HF communications, replacing the NSS receiver site at the Naval Communications Station in Cheltenham, Maryland.
[[File:Elmendorf AFB Alaska - 10sep2002.jpg|thumb|An overhead view of [[Elmendorf Air Force Base|Elmendorf AFB]], [[Alaska]], in late 2002. The
The Elmendorf array was decommissioned in May 2016<ref>[http://www.25af.af.mil/News/ArticleDisplay/tabid/6217/Article/779267/silencing-the-arctic-mammoth.aspx Silencing the Arctic Mammoth] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161018233223/http://www.25af.af.mil/News/ArticleDisplay/tabid/6217/Article/779267/silencing-the-arctic-mammoth.aspx |date=2016-10-18 }}", ''25th Air Force website'', 23 May 2016.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ktva.com/inside-a-classified-cold-war-era-antenna-site-now-shut-down-625/|title= A look inside a classified Cold War-era antenna site, now shut down|website=KTVA|date=25 May 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170501061010/http://www.ktva.com/inside-a-classified-cold-war-era-antenna-site-now-shut-down-625/|archive-date=May 1, 2017}}</ref> due to its age and unavailable repair parts.
The U.S. Army awarded a contract in 1968 to F&M Systems to build AN/FLR-9 systems for [[USASA Field Station Augsburg]], Germany, and Ramasun Station in [[Mueang Udon Thani District#Ramasun Station|Udon Thani]], Thailand ({{coord|17.2919|N|102.8682|E|scale:2000}}). Both were installed in 1970.<ref>The Army version has the same design as the Air Force version, but the design of the delay lines in the Beam Forming Networks inside the Central Building are different. The Army used what is called a "Lumped Constant" delay line design and the Air Force used a "Coaxial" delay line design.</ref> The Ramasun Station array was dismantled in 1975 following base closure.
During the 1970s, the Japanese government installed two large
===Surviving arrays and replacements===
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Later in the 1970s, [[Plessey]] (now [[Roke Manor Research Limited]]) of the United Kingdom developed the smaller, more economical Pusher CDAA array. At least 25 Pusher CDAAs were installed in many countries around the world. Several Pusher arrays were installed in U.S. military facilities, where the array is known as the AN/FRD-13.
In 1998 the Augsburg
===Post–Cold War arrays===
[[File:NASA FIRMS 2025-08-17 Chernyakhovsk CDAA 0.8km.png|thumb|Satellite imagery of the 0.8 km radius [[Chernyakhovsk CDAA]]]]
{{Asof|November 2020}} the Strategic Reconnaissance Command of the [[Bundeswehr|German Armed Forces]] operates as one of its three stationary [[Sigint]] battalions a {{convert|410|m}} wide circularly disposed array in [[Bramstedtlund]]. It was inaugurated in 1995 with construction started in 1989.<ref>{{cite web|title= Ein Vierteljahrhundert “Kastagnette“ |url= https://www.bundeswehr.de/de/organisation/cyber-und-informationsraum/aktuelles/ein-vierteljahrhundert-kastagnette-4184780 |work= [[Bundeswehr]] |date=2022-11-12 |access-date=2025-08-25 |lang=de |trans-title= A quarter-century Kastagnette“}}</ref>
In August 2025 media reported on [[Chernyakhovsk CDAA]], an almost finished, 1,600 m wide circularly disposed array circa 5 km southeast of the [[Chernyakhovsk (air base)|Chernyakhovsk airbase]] in the [[Kaliningrad enclave]].<ref>{{cite news|title= Satellite Images Appear To Show Russia Has New Spy Base on NATO's Doorstep |url= https://www.newsweek.com/russia-kaliningrad-spy-base-satellite-images-baltic-sea-nato-2117706 |work= newsweek.com |first1= Jordan |last1= King |first2= John |last2= Feng |date= 2025-08-22|access-date=2025-08-23}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=2025-08-20 |title=Putin lässt Mega-Abhörstation bauen – direkt an Nato-Grenze! |url=https://www.bild.de/politik/ausland-und-internationales/putin-laesst-mega-abhoerstation-bauen-direkt-an-nato-grenze-68a46c8ece696d388164233a |access-date=2025-08-22 |website=bild.de |language=de}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=Huge Antenna System is Being Built in Kaliningrad to Monitor NATO |url=https://militarnyi.com/en/news/huge-antenna-system-is-being-built-in-kaliningrad-to-monitor-nato/ |author=Vladislav V. |date=2025-08-21 |access-date=2025-08-23 |website=Militarnyi |language=en-US}}</ref>
==See also==
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*[[Radio direction finding]]
*[[Direction finding]]
*[[AN/FLR-9]], a ''Wullenweber''-class antenna array
*[[SIGINT]]
*[[Silver Strand Training Complex]]
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