The Wireless Set No. 19 was developed in 1940 by the
British War Office's
Signals Experimental Establishment and by
Pye Radio. The Pye model was replaced with the MK II model in 1941, and the MK III model in 1942. The sets proved valuable for
armoured fighting in the Western Desert. In 1942, the No. 19 Mk II was produced in Canada by
Northern Electric,
Canadian Marconi and
RCA Victor. The British design was improved and interchangeability of components such as the valves, was instituted. A majority of Canadian sets used English/Cyrillic front panel lettering, the result of a
Lend-Lease contract to the Soviet Red Army. Post-war, forward area battle group radio traffic carried by Wireless Set No. 19 nets was progressively migrated to low-band VHF using a more modern generation of radios known as the New Range, later to become known as
Larkspur. This employed
FM and replaced the No. 19 in this role from 1954. As a result, the No. 19's VHF 'B' section was abandoned and removed when sets were overhauled. The
Royal Armoured Corps No. 19 sets were mostly replaced in the mid-1950s with a militarized version of the PYE PTC-202 known as the C12 as an interim measure, which were subsequently replaced with the C13 from 1960. == See also ==