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AN/UYA-4
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The AN/UYA-4 is a series of system consoles developed by Hughes Aircraft Company for the United States Navy.[1]
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In accordance with the Joint Electronics Type Designation System (JETDS), the "AN/UYA-4" designation represents the 4th design of an Army-Navy electronic device for general utility computer auxiliary assembly. The JETDS system also now is used to name all Department of Defense electronic systems.
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The Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS) was originally developed to organize anti-aircraft warfare, but in the mid-1960s, it began to be considered for use in anti-submarine warfare (ASW) as well, and the ASWSC&CS (ASW Ship Command and Control System) project was initiated.[2] As part of this project, a console with greater versatility than the SYA-4 used by the early NTDS was required.[2] The UYA-4 was developed in response and was designed around 1965.[1][2]
The UYA-4 series was the first NTDS display subsystem to employ electronic circuits as integrated circuits instead of individual components such as transistors, resistors, and diodes.[2] The basic model is the OJ-194/UYA-4, which has a 12-inch plan position indicator, six buttons with fixed functions, and 18 variable-action buttons (VABs), allowing switching between 45 operational modes.[1]
This series also included table type consoles (operations summary console, OSC) with a large 20-inch PPI scope arranged horizontally so that the screen could be viewed from three sides:[2] initially the OA-7981 and later the OJ-195 and 197 were used.[1]
In addition, the OA-7980 was also included to process information about the altitude of targets by obtaining information from 3D radar and other sources.[1]
However, the functions of this series were basically limited to operation and display, and information processing was performed by mainframe computers such as the CP-642 and AN/UYK-7. The OJ-197/UYA-4 in particular was expensive to maintain and manage, and was gradually replaced in succeeding systems by the AN/UYQ-70, capable of processing information on its own.[1]
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