WSR-1

{{Infobox Radar

|name = WSR-1 – 4

|image = WSR-1 radar and radiosonde dome North Omaha Airport.jpg

|caption = The upper air and radar (WSR-1) site, on the left, at the North Omaha Airport from 1954 to 1974.

|country = United States

|introdate = 1946

|number = 82

|type = Weather radar

|frequency = 3.3 GHz (S band)

|PRF = 325 and 650 Hz

|beamwidth = {{formatnum:3.5}}°

|pulsewidth= 1 and 2μs excepted 1 and 4 μs on WSR-4

|RPM =

|range = more than {{convert|100|km|mi}}

|diameter = 2 m

|dimensions =

|azimuth = 0 to 360º

|elevation = -2 to 50º

|precision =

|power = 50 kW

}}

The WSR-1 or Weather Surveillance Radar-1 was one of the first weather radars and the first used by a civilian organization in the US.{{Cite journal|author1=S. G. Bigler |author2=P. L. Hexter Jr. |author3=F. E. Wells |title=The Radar Program of the U. S. Weather Bureau |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26246845 |doi=10.1175/1520-0477-43.11.591 |date= November 1962 | volume=43 |issue=11 |journal=Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society |issn=0003-0007 |pages=591–603 |access-date=2021-09-04|doi-access=free }} The WSR-1 series was a modified version of the AN/APS-2F radar, which the Weather Bureau (now the National Weather Service) acquired from the Navy. The WSR-1A, WSR-3, and WSR-4 were also variants of this radar.{{cite journal|first1=Roger C. |last1=Whiton|last2= al.|title=History of Operational Use of Weather Radar by U.S. Weather Services. Part I: The Pre-NEXRAD Era.|journal=Weather and Forecasting|volume= 13|issue= 2|pages= 219–243|date= 19 February 1998|publisher=American Meteorological Society|doi = 10.1175/1520-0434(1998)013<0219:HOOUOW>2.0.CO;2 |doi-access= free}} The first WSR-1 in the USA was at Washington National Airport in Washington, D.C., in 1947, and the last WSR-3 was retired by 1978.

History

In 1946, the US Weather Bureau (ancestor of the National Weather Service) retrieved 25 AN/APS-2F aeronautical radars from the US Navy. The radars have been modified and adapted to meteorology and then delivered at the rate of five per year. The modifications were conducted by the weather service and the modified radars took the successive names of WSR-1, WSR-1A, WSR-3 and WSR-4, depending on the gradual improvement of hardware. The first WSR-1 was put into service at the Washington, DC, national airport on March 12, 1947. The second began service on June 1, 1947 in Wichita, Kansas, in the heart of the Tornado Alley. In August of the same year, the WSR-1 installed at Norfolk, Nebraska proved its usefulness and cost savings by alerting the Elkhorn Valley power system of the approach of thunderstorms.

Three particularly severe weather events occurred during the spring of 1953 and led to the establishment of the Texas Tornado Warning Network. Major cities in Texas have been asked to fund the operation (both the private and public sectors) of modifying and implementing the WSR-1, WSR-1A, WSR-3 and WSR-4. The Weather Bureau agreed to operate these radars and maintain them in order to alert the public in case of danger, as soon as a visual confirmation was obtained. The establishment of the network became effective during a kick-off meeting on June 24, 1953. It took nearly six years for the network to be fully operational; 17 radars have been modified and installed thanks to the joint efforts of local authorities, the state, federal agencies and a university.

The APS-2F modified by Texas A & M University, although not actually part of the tornado surveillance network, was at least once used for warning purposes on April 5, 1956. After 1956 the modification of the APS-2F radars in their WSR-1, WSR-1A, WSR-3 and WSR-4 versions was assigned to the Weather Office headquarters which had to move some antennas that had originally been installed to locations where it was difficult to ensure the maintenance.

In April 1975, at the peak of the program, 82 WSR-1, WSR-1A, WSR-3 and WSR-4 were in service. Some were replaced by WSR-57s, but most remained in service until they were replaced by WSR-74s during a period from 1976 to 1980. No more remains in service today.

Characteristics

File:Meriden, Kansas, tornado as observed by the Topeka Weather Bureau WSR-3 radar.jpg

The WSR-1 to 4 series, the first operational weather radar in the United States, used the AN/APS-2F electronics, including a superheterodyne receiver, but with a larger antenna. As time progressed and experience with the original design increased, the Weather Bureau felt confident enough to upgrade the WSR-1 to WSR-1A, eventually finalizing on the WSR-3 and WSR-4 model. The WSR-4 upgrades included the removal of the original aircraft-oriented antenna in favor of a larger antenna, and the addition of a power converter such that it would now have the ability to function on conventional power.

The main difference between the versions was their display and the control of the probed atmospheric volume. The diameter of the dish was nearly 2 meters by the WSR-4. The wavelength used was about 10 cm which corresponds to a frequency of 3 GHz. This frequency is in the S band which is still used by the current US weather radar network. Thanks to the radars operative frequency, the attenuation due to the rain was almost zero,{{cite journal |language= en |author1=David Atlas| first2= Harold C.|last2= Banks |title= The interpretation of microwave reflections from rainfall| volume= 8 |issue= 5|journal = Journal of Meteorology| date= October 1951| doi=10.1175/1520-0469(1951)008<0271:TIOMRF>2.0.CO;2 |pages= 271–282 |author1-link= David Atlas |doi-access= free}} but the detection of a light rain or snow was delicate because of the weakness of the signal emitted by the radar (50 kW).

File:WSR-57 Weather Radar Console.jpg

The WSR-1 used a panoramic display (PPI) placing weather echoes in azimuth/distance coordinates on a circular screen whose center represented the position of the radar, and also a linear oscilloscope (A-Scope) showing the intensity of the echoes according to their distance from the radar. Everything was mounted on a rack. The WSR-3 and WSR-4 used A-Scope displays and height/distance displays (RHI) which allows a vertical sectional view in a chosen direction. They were mounted next to each other on a console. The WSR-1A used the same displays but stacked vertically. From a technical point of view, the WSR-4 had a traveling-wave tube that improved the sensitivity compared to the WSR-3.

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Radar Sites

File:NWS office and WSR-3 radar Hunstville International Airport.jpg

The 82 radar sites of WSR1, 1A, 3 and 4 are listed below

{{Hidden begin|title=WSR-1 and 1A sites{{cite web|language=en|url=https://www.weather.gov/ilx/nws-wb-history |title= Brief History of National Weather Service Offices Past and Present|author= Chris Geelhart (Central Office in Illinois) | publisher= National Weather Service | date= 9 March 2011 |accessdate= 5 April 2018}}}}

class="wikitable"
Location

! Commissioned

! Decommissioned

! Replaced by

Baton Rouge, LA

| August 16, 1955

| 1973?

|

Burrwood, LA

| 1956

| 1960

| WSR-4

Fort Worth, TX

| April 21, 1954

| April 1961

| WSR-57

Hartford, CT

| 1955

| 1959

| WSR-3

Dodge City, KS

| June 13, 1954

| July 25, 1963

| WSR-3

Lubbock, TX

| 1954

| August 1972

| WSR-74C

Norfolk, NE

| July 27, 1947

| 1976

| WSR-74C

North Omaha, NE

| 1955

| 1977

| WSR-74C

Oklahoma City, OK

| March 1, 1955

| 1960

| WSR-57

Philadelphia, PA

| November 20, 1959

| ?

|

Pittsburgh, PA

| 1952?

| October 4, 1963

|

Port Arthur, TX

| July 15, 1955

| ?

|

St. Louis, MO

| June 1955

| 1960

| WSR-57

Shreveport, LA

| November 1955

| 1976

| WSR-74C

Sioux Falls, SD

| 1956

| 1976?

| WSR-74C

Springfield, MO

| June 28, 1957

| ?

|

Tampa, FL

| 1956

| 1960

| WSR-57

Topeka, KS

| 1953

| 1957

| WSR-3

Tulsa, OK

| May 4, 1956

| 1976

| WSR-74C

Waco, TX

| April 28, 1955

| 1976

| WSR-74C

Washington, DC

| March 12, 1947

| ?

|

Wichita, KS

| June 1, 1947

| June 5, 1956

| WSR-3

Wichita Falls, TX

| April 25, 1956
(Replaced a military APS-2F radar)

| 1977

| WSR-74C

Worcester, MA

| March 16, 1956

| 1976

| WSR-74C

{{Hidden end}}

{{Hidden begin|title=WSR-3 sites}}

class="wikitable left" width="45%"
Location

! Commissioned

! Decommissioned

! Replaced by

Abilene, TX

| 25 March 1972

| 27 August 1977

|WSR-74C

Albany, NY

| 12 November 1958

| 27 July 1977

|WSR-74C

Astoria, OR

| 1 June 1959

| 1 November 1967

|

Binghamton, NY

| 15 June 1959

| 8 March 1978

|WSR-74S

Chicago/Midway, IL

| 19 April 1958

| January 1963

|WSR-57

Cleveland, OH

| 13 May 1957

| 4 August 1976|WSR-74C

|

Columbia, MO

| August 1957

| November 1977

|WSR-74C

Columbus, OH

| 12 February 1959

| 19 January 1977

|

Détroit, MI

| 1 May 1957

| 12 September 1962

|WSR-57

Dodge City, KS

| 25 July 1963

| 25 July 1972

|

Eureka, CA

| 1957

| June 1972

|Given to California State University in Humboldt

Flint, MI

| 15 November 1957

| 15 January 1978

|

Fort Smith, AR

| 30 August 1960

| 29 December 1975

| WSR-74C

Fort Wayne, IN

| 1957

| 12 March 1976

|WSR-74C

Hartford, CT

| 29 April 1959

| April 1977

| WSR-74C

Hunstville, AL

| October 1958

| 1977

| WSR-74C

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class="wikitable right" width="50%"
Location

! Commissioned

! Decommissioned

! Replaced by

Indianapolis, IN

| October 1959

| September 1977

|WSR-74C

Jackson, MS

| 1959

| 1969

|WSR-57

Little Rock, AR

| 19 December en remplacement d'un AN/APS-2E militaire

| 19 April 1962

|WSR-57

Macon, GA

| 21 April 1958

| 18 April 1977

|WSR-74C

Madison, WI

| 29 March 1958

| 15 May 1979

|WSR-74C

Memphis, TN

| 1957

| ?

|

Meridian, MS

| 16 August 1959

| 2 November 1976

|WSR-74C

Miami, FL

| Durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale

| ?

|

Montgomery, AL

| October 1958

| 1971

| WSR-74C in 1977

Muskegon, MI

| 9 May 1957

| 25 March 1976

|WSR-74C

Nashville, TN

| 2 April 1957

| 31 October 1970

|WSR-57

Richmond, VA

| 7 July 1958

| October 1959

|

Rochester, MN

| September 1960

| April 1976

|WSR-74C

Scottbluff, MO

| Summer 1969

| 1978

|

Tatoosh Island, WA

| 1 October 1960

| January 1964

|

Topeka, KS

| 1957

| 1976

|WSR-74C

Wichita, Kansas

| 5 June 1956

| 22 June 1960

|WSR-57

{{Hidden end}}

{{Hidden begin|title=WSR-4 sites}}

class="wikitable " width="100%"
Location

! Commissioned

! Decommissioned

! Replaced by

Burrwood, LA

| 1960

| ?

|

Concordia, KS

| 1 June 1962

| 18 February 1977

|WSR-74C

Savannah, GA

| 7 April 1960

| 1970

|

{{Hidden end}}

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References

{{US wx radar}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Wsr-1}}

Category:National Weather Service weather radars