on anti-Diver duty at
Hastings, 28 July 1944. A week after 'Overlord' began on
D-Day (6 June), the Germans began launching
V-1 flying bombs, codenamed 'Divers', against London. V-1s (known to Londoners as 'Doodlebugs') presented AA Command's biggest challenge since
The Blitz of 1940–41. Defences had been planned against this new form of attack (
Operation Diver), but the missiles' small size, high speed and awkward height presented a severe problem for AA guns. 2 AA Group's HAA batteries left their 'Overlord' sites and moved to pre-planned sites across the 'funnel' of V-1 flightpaths. However, the initial results were disappointing, and after a fortnight AA Command changed its tactics. The HAA gun belt was moved to the coast and interlaced with LAA guns to hit the missiles out to sea, where the gun-laying radar worked best and where a 'downed' V-1 would cause no damage. This new belt was divided into six brigade sectors,
43 AA Bde taking charge of one sector, with 183rd (M) HAA Rgt under command. The whole process involved the movement of hundreds of guns and vehicles and thousands of servicemen and women, but a new 8-gun site could be established in 48 hours. After moving the mobile
3.7-inch HAA guns to the coast, these were progressively replaced by the static Mark IIC model, which had power traverse that could more quickly track the fast-moving targets, accompanied by the most sophisticated Radar No 3 Mark V (the
SCR-584 radar set) and No 10 Predictor (the all-electric
Bell Labs AAA Computer). These were emplaced on temporary 'Pile platforms' named after the C-in-C of AA Command. The introduction of VT
Proximity fuzes also increased the 'kill rate'. The guns were constantly in action, but success rates against the 'Divers' steadily improved, until over 50 per cent of incoming missiles were destroyed by gunfire or fighter aircraft. This phase of Operation Diver ended in September after the V-1 launch sites in Northern France had been overrun by
21st Army Group. In August 183rd (M) HAA Rgt had moved to
71 AA Bde, still in the Diver Belt, but in September–October it was with
5 AA Bde under 1 AA Group, which operated a 'Diver Box' covering the Thames Estuary, as the
Luftwaffe began air-launching V-1s over the
North Sea. In November it left 71 AA Bde once more and rejoined 30 AA Bde, now in
5 AA Group, which was controlling the 'Diver Fringe' protecting the East Coast against air-launched V-1s. ==Antwerp 'X' deployment==