Yellow Duckling began with the Blue Lagoon work, using it as a sea surface scanner in an attempt to detect the disturbed wake of a submerged submarine and its heat signature. The detector element was a 6 mm PbTe square. In 1953 the first test equipment was flown aboard a
Handley Page Hastings, WD484. Later tests would use TG514, after WD484 was lost. These later tests were carried out around
Malta, hunting , the last of the World War II
S-class submarines still in commission. The PbTe detector was found to be capable of detecting a surfaced submarine, but not one submerged, snorkeling nor its wake. An improved detector was developed, with a new element and new scanner. The detector element was a large 15 mm square of copper-
doped germanium, cooled to
liquid hydrogen temperatures. This was potentially sensitive to temperature differences of 1/2000 °C. The new scanner used a diameter mirror with a
focal length. The whole assembly, mirror and detector, rotated continuously at 150rpm. Its axis was inclined at 30° to the vertical, to give a view facing forwards and slightly down. Rotation gave a sideways line scan, with the aircraft's motion scanning perpendicular to this. The new germanium detector was no more sensitive than the earlier PbTe element, but was considered easier to use in service. Its detection results were disappointing: in 1956 trials it only detected around 20% of snorkeling submarines, even when their position was already known. It could not detect a submarine any deeper than . These were in the optimum conditions of the warm, calm Mediterranean at night, rather than the rough Atlantic of its likely service conditions. Not significantly useful at sea, it was used experimentally on land during the
EOKA armed struggle in
Cyprus during the late 1950s. Never an important piece of equipment in ASW terms, Yellow Duckling did give rise to the very important field of
infrared linescan surveillance, which was an important military reconnaissance technique throughout the 1960s and 1970s. == Clinker ==