History
RAF Rhuddlan was a "West Coast" type Chain Home station used during WW2.
It originally had two pairs of 325' guyed steel transmitting masts and two 240' wooden receiving towers. Sadly no longer there.
There's very little information available on this site.
Chain Home Low (CHL) was a British radar early warning system, detecting enemy aircraft movement at lower altitudes than the fixed Chain Home system, and operated by the RAF during World War II. It used higher power, operating at a shorter wavelength of 1.5 metres than Chain Home.
The CHL system used the same 'filter rooms' arrangements as Chain Home and they were fully integrated with each other in 1940, just in time to cope with the Battle of Britain. The range was always less than the CH system could manage but in contrast, the altitude information was now accurate down to 500 feet. Thus the two systems complemented each other. The shorter wavelengths meant that smaller aerials and lower masts had to be employed.
Site report
I'd known about the existance of other WW2 bunkers in the area for some time as I grew up near to the area as a child, a friend of mine's family owns some private land nearby to this site which has another 2 bunkers which have since been converted, one was at onetime used as a rehersal studio.
Anyway this bunker is well tucked away off the beaten track in a small very over grown wood, loads of thorn bushes so beware!!
great condition inside ground level and no grafitti!! unfortunatley the lower levels are completely flooded. very deep. there is a ladder going down to sub level but you would definitley need a frogmans outfit to explore haha!
Thanks for looking.
RAF Rhuddlan was a "West Coast" type Chain Home station used during WW2.
It originally had two pairs of 325' guyed steel transmitting masts and two 240' wooden receiving towers. Sadly no longer there.
There's very little information available on this site.
Chain Home Low (CHL) was a British radar early warning system, detecting enemy aircraft movement at lower altitudes than the fixed Chain Home system, and operated by the RAF during World War II. It used higher power, operating at a shorter wavelength of 1.5 metres than Chain Home.
The CHL system used the same 'filter rooms' arrangements as Chain Home and they were fully integrated with each other in 1940, just in time to cope with the Battle of Britain. The range was always less than the CH system could manage but in contrast, the altitude information was now accurate down to 500 feet. Thus the two systems complemented each other. The shorter wavelengths meant that smaller aerials and lower masts had to be employed.
Site report
I'd known about the existance of other WW2 bunkers in the area for some time as I grew up near to the area as a child, a friend of mine's family owns some private land nearby to this site which has another 2 bunkers which have since been converted, one was at onetime used as a rehersal studio.
Anyway this bunker is well tucked away off the beaten track in a small very over grown wood, loads of thorn bushes so beware!!
great condition inside ground level and no grafitti!! unfortunatley the lower levels are completely flooded. very deep. there is a ladder going down to sub level but you would definitley need a frogmans outfit to explore haha!
Thanks for looking.
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