Back-Up Interceptor Control Explained

Backup Interceptor Control (BUIC,) was the Electronic Systems Division 416M System to backup the SAGE 416L System in the United States and Canada. BUIC deployed Cold War command, control, and coordination systems to SAGE radar stations to create dispersed NORAD Control Centers.

Back-Up Interceptor Control sites[1]
Station Location BUIC IBUIC II BUIC III
Baudette AFS[2] 1968
Calumet Air Force Station[3] yes
??
Charleston Air Force Station[4] 3/1963 3/1966 12/1969
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes yes
yes
yes
until 3/1966
yes
Mount Laguna AFS[5] yes
North Bend AFS[6] 12/1962 yes
North Truro AFS[7] 1963 9/1965 yes
Othello AFS[8] Yes Yes
Palermo AFS[9] 10/1965
Port Austin AFS[10] 1965 1968
Saratoga Springs AFS[11] until 1965
yes yes
yes yes yes
yes
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Background

Prior to the SAGE Direction Centers becoming operational, the USAF deployed data link systems at NORAD Control Centers with ground computers for controlling crewed interceptors. After SAGE IBM AN/FSQ-7 Combat Direction Centrals became operational and the Super Combat Centers with improved (digital) computers were cancelled, a backup to SAGE was planned[12] in the event the above-ground SAGE Air Defense Direction Center failed.

General Electric AN/GPA-37 Course Directing Group

BUIC began with deployment of General Electric AN/GPA-37 Course Directing Groups to several Long Range Radar stations. Units designated included the "U.S. Air Force 858th Air Defense Group (BUIC) [which became] a permanent operating facility" at Naval Air Station Fallon in Nevada.[13]

BUIC II

BUIC II was used to command and control sites using the Burroughs AN/GSA-51 Radar Course Directing Group. North Truro AFS became the first ADC installation configured for BUIC II.[14]

BUIC III

The AN/GYK-19[15] (initially AN/GSA-51A) was an upgraded version of the BUIC II system designated AN/GSA-51A[16] and required a larger building than the AN/GSA-51. The first BUIC III site was Fort Fisher AFS,[15] and Air Defense Command's was first installed at Fort Fisher Air Force Station, North Carolina.[17]

Although more advanced systems were contemplated, the final design of the BUIC III system was an upgraded version of the BUIC II with around twice the performance.[18]

Closure and upgrade

In 1972, the USAF decided to shut down most of the BUIC sites; most of the sites mothballed by 1974, except for the BUIC III site at Tyndall Air Force Base.[19] In Canada the BUIC site at Senneterre was shut down, but St Margarets remained open. The remaining sites were closed between 1983-1984 when SAGE was replaced by the Joint Surveillance System.

The AN/FYQ-47 Common Digitizer for the Joint Surveillance System, and the Radar Video Data Processor (RVDP) was a combined system for the Air Force and Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), it replaced the SAGE Burroughs AN/FST-2 Coordinate Data Transmitting Sets.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Air Defense Radar Stations - sitetype=BUIC. Radomes.org. 9 November 2014.
  2. Web site: Baudette Air Force Station - A Brief History.
  3. News: 665th RS in Copper Country. The Patriot. 28 September 1979. 23rd Norad Air Division. Duluth.
  4. Welcome Brochure 765th Radar Squadron Charleston AFS, ME . Furbush-Roberts Printing Company . 2013-03-02.
  5. News: Radar Station Grows In Size . San Diego Union . April 12, 1970 . Betty Lubrano . 2013-03-02.
  6. Squadron History . US Air Force . 2013-03-02.
  7. North Truro Air Force Station. Communications & Electronics Digest. Sep 1967. 24–25. Air Defense Command.
  8. News: 637th Radar Sqdn., Othello AFS, WA . Othello Outlook . 2013-03-02.
  9. News: Second BUIC Facility Joins NORAD Net. Reading Eagle. 10 November 1965.
  10. Port Austin AFS, MI History . US Air Force . Radomes.org . 2013-03-02.
  11. Communications & Electronics Digest . Air Defense Command . September 1967 . 2013-03-02.
  12. minutes . Biweekly Report for 29 July 1955 . Lincoln Laboratory Division 6 . Memorandum 6M-3797 . 2013-07-25 . The Systems Office has obtained more detailed information about the Radar Course Directing Group, AN/GPA-37, at a symposium held at RADC on 26 and 27 July. The GPA-37 is intended for backup air defense for SAGE and will be operated at the Heavy Radar P-sites in the Zone of Interior..
  13. February 2002 . Archives Search Report Findings: Dixie Valley Bombing Target No. 21 .
  14. Book: Winkler, David F.. Webster, Julie L. Searching the skies: The legacy of the United States Cold War Defense Radar Program. 1997. US Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratories. Champaign, IL. 44. 97020912.
  15. Web site: NORAD Back-Up Intercept Control (BUIC) Sites . Radomes.org . 1981-09-02 . 2013-03-02.
  16. BUIC III at Tyndall. Communications & Electronics Digest. August 1968. 19–21. Air Defense Command.
  17. News: First BUIC Site Opens: Ft. Fisher first in ADC To Get New Defense System. The Command Post. Stewart AFB, NY. January 1969.
  18. Book: Searching the Skies: the Legacy of the United States Cold War Defense Radar Program. CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING RESEARCH LAB (ARMY). Winkler, David F. . Webster, Julie L . https://web.archive.org/web/20121201202922/http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA331231. dead. December 1, 2012.
  19. Web site: Air Defense Radar Stations . Radomes.org . 2013-03-02.