RAF Denge explained

Denge is a former Royal Air Force site near Dungeness, in Kent, England. It is best known for the early experimental acoustic mirrors which remain there.

The RAF had begun research into acoustic mirrors during World War I.[1]

The Denge acoustic mirrors, known colloquially as 'listening ears', are located between Greatstone-on-Sea and Lydd airfield, on the banks of a now disused gravel pit. The mirrors were built in the late 1920s and early 1930s as an experimental early warning system for incoming aircraft, developed by William Sansome Tucker. Several were built along the south and east coasts, but the complex at Denge is the best preserved, and are protected as scheduled monuments.

Denge complex

There are three acoustic mirrors in the complex, each consisting of a single concrete hemispherical reflector.[2] [3]

Acoustic mirrors did work and could effectively be used to detect slow moving enemy aircraft before they came into sight. They worked by concentrating sound waves towards a central point, where a microphone would have been located. However, their use was limited as aircraft became faster. Operators also found it difficult to distinguish between aircraft and seagoing vessels. In any case, they quickly became obsolete due to the invention of radar in 1932. The experiment was abandoned, and the mirrors left to decay. The gravel extraction works caused some undermining of at least one of the structures.

The striking forms of the sound mirrors have attracted artists and photographers. British artist Tacita Dean created a film inspired by the complex. The band Turin Brakes featured the mirrors on some of their album covers. The object appeared in the music video for Blank & Jones' "A Forest".The mirrors have also been featured in the music videos for "Last Time Forever" by Squeeze, Invaders Must Die by The Prodigy, Young Kato - Something Real and "A Kiss For The Whole World x" by Enter Shikari.

Restoration

In 2003, English Heritage secured £500,000 from the Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund and from the EU's Interreg programme under the Historic Fortifications Network, as administered by Kent County Council.[4] This money was spent to restore the damage caused by the gravel works, as well as to install a swing bridge which now is the only means of access, reducing the monument's exposure to vandalism. The mirrors are situated on an island within an RSPB nature reserve, and can only be accessed on open days as the designated site (which has both Site of Special Scientific Interest and Special Protection Area status) is sensitive to disturbance.

External links

50.9561°N 0.9539°W

Notes and References

  1. Air and Space Power Review, Vol 22 No 3, The RAF and its Approach to Science in The Interwar Period https://www.raf.mod.uk/what-we-do/centre-for-air-and-space-power-studies/aspr/aspr-vol22-iss3-7-pdf/
  2. Web site: Sound Mirrors on the South Coast . 12 December 2008 . 3 March 2002 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090502154225/http://www.doramusic.com/soundmirrors.htm . 2 May 2009 . dmy-all.
  3. Web site: Denge sound mirrors . 8 March 2009.
  4. Web site: Britain's Concrete Ears To Be Saved By English Heritage . 12 December 2008 . 29 July 2003.