Difference between revisions of "EE-8"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
RadioNerds (talk | contribs) (→Images) |
RadioNerds (talk | contribs) (→Images) |
||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
File:Ringer MC-131 8751771541 l.jpg | File:Ringer MC-131 8751771541 l.jpg | ||
File:Generators for EE-4A & EE-8 053 8709471746 l.jpg | File:Generators for EE-4A & EE-8 053 8709471746 l.jpg | ||
+ | File:EE-8 8709471390 l.jpg | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 01:54, 20 August 2013
The EE-8 Field Telephone was used by the Signal Corps from before World War II through the Vietnam War. It was housed in leather, then canvas, and its last production had a nylon case and straps, after the changeover to that material in 1967.
The EE-8 Field Telephone was standardized in 1932 and procurement began in 1937, providing a lighter and more functional unit just in time for the huge mobilization of the U.S. military for WW II. Among other improvements, the EE-8 increased the maximum transmission range of the predecessor EE-5 Field Telephone by six miles or more.
Schematics
Images
Related Files
- War Department Technical Manual
- Telephones
- EE-8,
- EE-8-A
- EE-8-B
- March 1945