. Aerographer's Mate 3 & 2. United States. Navy; Meteorology; Oceanography. AEROGRAPHER'S MATE 3 & 2. RECORDER HEAD ASSEMBLY ELECTRONIC CHASSIS ASSEMBLY CONSOLE ASSEMBLY F igure 6- 7. — Radar F ac sim ile GMH-6( ). Recorder AN/ paper fast feed switch, which are located on the Recorder Head. Operation Prior to operation of the Radar Facsimile Recorder, personnel should refer to the pub- lication NAVAIR 50-30GMH6-1. Complete operating instructions are contained in this publication. Maintenance Servicing and maintaining this equipment are the responsibilities of trained electronic
. Aerographer's Mate 3 & 2. United States. Navy; Meteorology; Oceanography. AEROGRAPHER'S MATE 3 & 2. RECORDER HEAD ASSEMBLY ELECTRONIC CHASSIS ASSEMBLY CONSOLE ASSEMBLY F igure 6- 7. — Radar F ac sim ile GMH-6( ). Recorder AN/ paper fast feed switch, which are located on the Recorder Head. Operation Prior to operation of the Radar Facsimile Recorder, personnel should refer to the pub- lication NAVAIR 50-30GMH6-1. Complete operating instructions are contained in this publication. Maintenance Servicing and maintaining this equipment are the responsibilities of trained electronics per- sonnel. As with other complex electronic equip- ment the maintenance duties of theAerographer's Mate are limited to keeping the exterior of the equipment clean and promptly reporting any in- ternal difficulties to the responsible parties. Safety Precautions High voltage is used in the operation of all radar. Extremely dangerous voltages exist in the receiver, transmitter, modulators, main console, and remote indicator. Death on contact may result if operating personnel fail to ob- serve safety precautions. Only authorized op- eration of equipment should be carried out by the operator. All operators must know how to secure main power, both remote and locally, to the set in use. All operators must know how to apply artificial respiration and how to contact immediate medical aid. SATELLITES AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT Since the launching of the first weather satellites in early 1960, we have witnessed the birth of the meteorological satellite as an un- precedented tool for observing broad-scale global data, and its growth into a highly sophisticated global observation system capable of providing innumerable valuable measurements of interest to the scientific community. The Television Infrared Observational Sat- ellite (better known as TIROS) that pioneered in worldwide meteorological photography evolved into the ESSA satellite which contained improved camera systems as well
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, booksubjectmeteorology, booksubjectunitedstates