On the night of 8/9 August 1941,
Ludwig Becker and his radio operator (
Bordfunker) Josef Staub, became the first Luftwaffe night fighter crew to intercept an enemy bomber using airborne radar. Flying
Dornier Do 215 B-5 of 4.
Staffel/
NJG 1 "G9+OM" equipped with the FuG 202
Lichtenstein B/C radar, they tracked and claimed a
Vickers Wellington bomber shot down. The aircraft shot down was Wellington
T2625 GR-B which crashed near
Bunde. The British knew in 1942 that Luftwaffe night fighters were having unprecedented success tracking aircraft. A specialist team was set up to attempt to identify the electronic characteristics of any German airborne apparatus. A
Vickers Wellington bomber was adapted, with a Technical Officer and monitoring equipment in the fuselage. This aircraft flew on bombing raids as a decoy, hoping to be intercepted. In December 1942, on the 18th sortie, it was tracked and intercepted by a Luftwaffe night fighter, sustaining heavy damage and then ditching in the sea off Kent, England. The aircrew transmitted and brought back the electronic data, surviving the ditching. The electronics specialist, Pilot Officer Jordan, was awarded the
Distinguished Service Order, unusual for that rank of officer. Following the capture in May 1943 of the
Ju 88 R-1, Werknummer 360 043 that was equipped with it, the Allies were able to jam and track the early FuG 202 and 212 sets by the summer of 1943. During several months in this period they rendered these sets almost useless by blinding them with
Window, termed
Düppel by the Germans. Full jamming of the SN-2 took longer but was finally accomplished by the Allies following the mistaken landing due to a navigation error of a Ju 88G-1 night fighter from 7.
Staffel/
NJG 2 at
RAF Woodbridge, equipped with both the
Flensburg radar detector and the SN-2 radar on July 13, 1944, compromising both systems to the Allies. Some Allied aircraft were then equipped with 'Piperack' which countered the Lichtenstein SN-2 aerial intercept radar. Much more dangerous were
Mosquito intruders equipped with a device called
Serrate to allow them to track German night fighters by emissions from their Lichtenstein B/C, C-1 or SN-2 sets. The corkscrew manoeuvre was developed to remove an attacked heavy bomber from within the 60-
degree cone of coverage of an attacking night fighter's Lichtenstein radar. The technique was developed using the WkNr. 360 043, early model UHF-band Lichtenstein C-1-equipped,
Ju 88R-1 night fighter, that had landed at
RAF Dyce in April 1943 by its crew of defectors. It was also later flown in tests by the RAF enemy aircraft evaluation unit,
1426 Flight, known colloquially as the
Rafwaffe. ==See also==