The Visual–Aural Radio Range (VAR)
History, Technology & Australia’s 30-Year Adoption

LFRR → Lorenz → VAR → VOR • 112–118 MHz • Blue & yellow indicator • 1937–1980 • Australian DCA network • ARC Type 16 • Collins airborne equipment • Weston Instruments Model 888 • Research for Jan SP5XZG

‣ VK6ADA.COM.AU — Aviation History & Radio Technology • March 2026
✈ Aviation Radio Navigation History 📅 March 2026 🔋 112–118 MHz VHF • 1937–1980 ✉ Research: Jan SP5XZG • Response: Mike Peace VK6ADA
Enquiry — Jan SP5XZG

“Before WW II, a peculiar radio navigation system called VAR was devised in the States, which was used until 1960. It was eventually replaced by VOR. However, as I learned, the VAR survived in Australia up to 1980. VAR was a 108–118 MHz AM incarnation of the LFRR navigation system… The VAR used an indicator with blue and yellow fields on the instrument panel relieving the pilot from having to listen to the A and N in CW. Have you heard about VAR, and was it indeed popular in Australia during the Cold War? If yes, which vendor of the VAR equipment was the most popular in Australia? Was that Collins?”  — Jan SP5XZG

Summary. Yes, I had heard of VAR — and Jan’s research is impeccable. The Visual–Aural Radio Range was very much a part of Australian aviation, not as an obscure Cold War curiosity but as the primary en-route navigation system for all instrument flying in Australia from 1953 to 1980 — a remarkable 27 years of operational service after the system had been retired in the United States. Australia built approximately 50 VAR stations across its territory, making it by far the largest deployment of VAR outside the United States. The system had deep roots: Australia had been a pioneer of VHF navigation since the late 1930s, and the Lorenz–to-VAR–to-VOR progression was a logical evolution of the same fundamental concept. On the airborne equipment question: several manufacturers supplied VAR receivers to the Australian market, with American firms dominating. Collins Radio was certainly among them, and the evidence points clearly to Collins equipment in Australian civil aviation service.

Part I — The LFRR Family Tree: From Radio Beams to VAR

The Low-Frequency Radio Range (LFRR) — The Root System

To understand VAR, one must first understand its ancestor, the Low-Frequency Radio Range (LFRR), sometimes called the “Four-Course Range” or “Adcock Range.” Inspired by a 1907 patent by German engineer Otto Scheller, the LFRR was deployed by the United States from 1927 as the first widespread aerial radio navigation system. It operated in the MF band, typically 200–400 kHz, using a four-antenna Adcock array that produced two overlapping figure-eight radiation patterns.

One pattern was keyed with the Morse letter “A” (dot-dash) and the other with “N” (dash-dot). These two letters interlock perfectly — the dash of “N” fills the gap in “A,” and vice versa — so that at the exact boundary between the two patterns, the aural signal merged into a continuous tone. Flying precisely along one of the four on-course beams, the pilot heard a steady note in his headphones. Drifting left or right, the letters A or N would emerge from the continuous tone, telling him which way to correct. Four beams radiated at roughly 90° to each other from each station, defining airways in four directions.

Note on cockpit workload: Jan correctly characterises the LFRR as a burden to early pilots. Navigating by the A-N signal required the pilot to wear headphones continuously, mentally track whether he was hearing “A,” “N,” or a continuous tone, maintain situational awareness about which of the four beams he was on, and still fly the aircraft. The 1930s cockpit had no autopilot, and weather flying on instruments was exhausting mental work even without the added aural navigation burden.

Australia’s VHF Advantage — The Lorenz Aeradio Network

Australia took a different path from the United States. Rather than adopting LFRR, Australian civil aviation authorities preferred the German Lorenz beam system, which operated at approximately 33 MHz VHF — already well above the static-prone MF band used by LFRR. This made Australia the first country in the world to adopt a VHF navigation system on a national scale.

The catalyst was the Kyeema disaster of 1938. On 25 October 1938, an Australian National Airways DC-2 named Kyeema flew into Mount Dandenong near Melbourne in instrument conditions, killing all 18 on board. The crash exposed the absence of adequate en-route radio navigation aids in Australia. The response was decisive: the Department of Civil Aviation (DCA) contracted Standard Telephone and Cable (the Australian subsidiary of ITT, which owned Lorenz) to build an “Aeradio” network of 15 Lorenz beam stations across the populous south-east, growing over time to cover the major trunk routes.1

The Lorenz system worked on the same interlocking A-N principle as LFRR, but at 33 MHz VHF, it was far less susceptible to atmospheric static, “night effect,” and sky-wave contamination. It could also be equipped with a visual needle indicator — a feature LFRR entirely lacked. By the early 1950s, Australia had accumulated nearly two decades of experience with VHF radio navigation, which smoothed the path to VAR considerably.

Part II — The Visual-Aural Radio Range: How It Worked

Development History

The Visual–Aural Radio Range was developed by the US Bureau of Air Commerce (later the Civil Aeronautics Authority, or CAA) starting in the mid-1930s. Engineers recognised that moving LFRR’s frequency into the VHF band would largely eliminate its atmospheric noise problems, and that adding a visual cockpit indicator would address the headphone workload burden. A demonstration VAR system was built in 1937 at an Indianapolis research centre, and an experimental airway between Chicago and New York was established in 1941.2

World War II intervened. Wartime shortages of VHF components prevented the large-scale deployment that had been planned, and in the meantime, the far more capable VOR (VHF Omnidirectional Range) was advancing rapidly with wartime electronics development. By 1943, VOR was already “deemed practical,” and by 1946 it was being deployed in the United States. The CAA pressed ahead with 70 VAR stations in the US between 1944 and 1950, but VOR — offering 360 radials instead of VAR’s four courses — made the older system obsolete almost immediately. The last American VAR was decommissioned in 1960.

The Ground Station

A VAR ground station was physically compact compared to LFRR: the shorter VHF wavelength allowed antenna arrays that fit on top of a modest transmitter building, rather than the multi-acre Adcock arrays required for MF. The station produced a composite signal pattern:

│ VAR Ground Station — Technical Specification

Frequency band 108–118 MHz VHF (AM)Australian network operated 112–118 MHz; channels A through E assigned. Channel Z reserved for ILS localiser.
Visual tracks Two overlapping patterns (90 Hz and 150 Hz tones)90 Hz = yellow sector; 150 Hz = blue sector. Equal tones = on course (pointer centred).
Aural tracks Two overlapping patterns (Morse A and N, 1,020 Hz tone)Same A-N interlocking principle as LFRR; continuous tone when on-course. ~1.5–2° beam width.
Track arrangement Visual tracks on airways; aural tracks 90° to visualIn Australia: visual tracks aligned with major airways; aural tracks used for secondary routes.
Range ~100 miles at 8,000–10,000 ftLine-of-sight VHF; terrain-dependent. Usable to approximately 20,000 ft.
Accuracy ~1.5–2° track accuracyBetter than LFRR’s ~3°; worse than VOR’s ~1°. Adequate for en-route airways navigation.
Marker beacons Fan (airway) and cone (Z) markers, 75 MHzIdentified by modulation tone: 400 Hz = blue (outer/ILS); 1,300 Hz = amber (middle/ILS); 3,000 Hz = white (airway/Z). Compatible with ILS markers.
Station ID Morse code call letters at 30-second intervalsAlternately keyed on both aural patterns; aural track navigation unavailable during ID transmission.

The Cockpit Indicator — Blue and Yellow

The critical human-factors improvement of VAR over LFRR was the cross-pointer indicator (also called the “cross-pointer instrument” or simply the “VAR indicator”). The receiver’s circuitry compared the relative strength of the 90 Hz and 150 Hz tones and fed the result to a vertical needle that moved left or right in a dial face divided into blue and yellow sectors.

  VAR CROSS-POINTER INDICATOR — HOW TO READ IT

  ┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
  │                  ┃                  │
  │    BLUE   ◄══════┃══════►   YELLOW  │
  │  (150 Hz)        ┃         (90 Hz)  │
  │                  ┃                  │
  │              ON COURSE              │
  └─────────────────────────────────────┘

  Needle centred → ON COURSE on visual track
  Needle right → aircraft in YELLOW sector (90 Hz dominant) → fly LEFT
  Needle left  → aircraft in BLUE sector (150 Hz dominant) → fly RIGHT

  Full scale deflection at ~10° off track (±10° range)
  Progressive deflection proportional to deviation

  QUADRANT IDENTIFICATION (combined visual + aural):
  Blue + Morse "A"  = one quadrant (unique combination)
  Blue + Morse "N"  = another quadrant
  Yellow + Morse "A" = another quadrant
  Yellow + Morse "N" = another quadrant
  No combination is repeated — immediate position awareness

The visual indicator meant the pilot no longer had to maintain continuous headphone attention to navigate. The needle provided instant, unambiguous deviation information — the same principle used in the ILS localizer (which shared both the frequency band and the 90/150 Hz tones). When the pilot did listen on the audio, the combined quadrant information (a colour plus a Morse letter) gave an unambiguous indication of which of the four sectors of the station he was in — no two quadrants shared the same audio-visual combination.

📖 VAR and ILS: the same DNA. The 90 Hz / 150 Hz visual sector system used by VAR was identical in principle to the ILS localizer that guides aircraft to runways today. VAR receivers could often use the same airborne equipment and cockpit indicator as ILS — which was a major economic argument in VAR’s favour over LFRR, and also one of the reasons VOR ultimately won: VOR shared the same frequency band and was designed to use the same receivers and indicators as ILS, removing VAR’s main competitive advantage.

Part III — Australia: The World’s Last VAR Nation

Why Australia Chose VAR — and Kept It

Australia’s decision to build a VAR network was logical given its history. The country already operated a 33 MHz Lorenz Aeradio network with pilot familiarity built up over nearly two decades. The Lorenz system used a single beam with a back course; VAR offered two visual plus two aural courses with a proper cockpit indicator — a meaningful upgrade using the same basic concept pilots already understood. As Flying the Beams notes, the operational similarity between Lorenz and VAR made the transition straightforward for Australian aircrew.

Construction of the Australian VAR network began in 1947 and the initial 30 stations were commissioned by January 1953, when the DCA published Publication No. 19: Operational Notes on Visual-Aural Radio Range and Associated Marker Beacons — the document Jan SP5XZG identified.3 That initial network fully superseded the old Lorenz Aeradio system.

The network eventually grew to approximately 50 VAR stations covering Australia’s major airways — a network second in scale globally only to the 70-station US deployment, and proportionally far more significant given Australia’s flying geography. Unlike the Americans, who had already pivoted to VOR before the VAR network was fully built, Australia had no incentive to rush the transition: the country’s vast distances and relatively sparse traffic made a staged modernisation entirely rational. The Australian VAR network remained in full operational service until 1980, when VOR (accompanied by its essential companion, DME) finally replaced it.

✓ Confirmed: VAR was genuinely central to Australian Cold War aviation. From 1953 to 1980 — 27 years — every instrument-rated pilot flying the trunk routes of Australia used the VAR system as their primary en-route navigation aid. This was not a marginal or experimental system: it was the instrument for cross-country flying in Australia during the Cold War era. Ansett, TAA, and every general aviation operator using instrument flight rules depended on it.

The Frequency Band: An Important Correction for Jan

Jan’s enquiry describes VAR as operating at 108–118 MHz. This is the correct US specification. In Australia, the band was slightly different: the DCA 1953 publication specifies that Australian VAR stations operated at 112–118 MHz, with channels designated A through E assigned for range use and channel Z reserved for ILS localiser compatibility. This 112–118 MHz sub-band within the VHF navigation spectrum ensured airborne receivers tuned for Australian VAR were also compatible with ILS localisers using the standard VHF navigation frequency range.

Australian VAR Network — Key Facts
Parameter
Australian Network
Frequency112–118 MHz VHF; channels A–E for VAR, channel Z for ILS. (US network: 108–118 MHz)
Construction1947–1950; initial 30 stations, expanded to ~50 over the 1950s and 1960s
Commission dateJanuary 1953 (DCA Publication No. 19 published at commissioning)
PredecessorStandard Telephone and Cable “Aeradio” Lorenz beam network; 15 stations at 33 MHz
Operational period1953–1980 (27 years of continuous service)
WithdrawalReplaced by VOR + DME network, 1980
Station count~50 stations (source: flyingthebeams.com; 2nd largest VAR network globally)
Visual track orientationAligned on major airways; north-south routes: yellow (90 Hz) east of station, blue (150 Hz) west
Marker beaconsFan (airway) markers and Z-markers at 75 MHz; coded in dashes by track number
MonitoringAutomatic; track deviation alarm at ±3° (aural) and ±30% (visual sideband failure)

Part IV — Airborne Equipment: Receivers and Indicators

The Four Basic Components

Every aircraft operating on VAR routes in Australia needed four basic airborne components: a VAR receiver, a control panel, a cross-pointer indicator, and an appropriate VHF antenna. The DCA 1953 publication specifies that typical Australian VAR airborne receivers provided reception on six selectable channels, designated by letters matching the ground station channel assignments.

Aircraft Radio Corporation (ARC) — Type 16

Jan SP5XZG identifies the ARC Type 16 as a dedicated VAR receiver. The Aircraft Radio Corporation (ARC) of Boonton, New Jersey was one of the founding names in American avionics. Its history is extraordinary: it was ARC equipment that Jimmy Doolittle used for the world’s first completely “blind” flight in 1929, and ARC manufactured the AN/ARC-5 command set family that was ubiquitous in Allied military aircraft throughout World War II.4

In the postwar period, ARC moved into the civil aviation market with a series of VHF receivers and navigation equipment. Their Type 12 series, for example, covered 0.2–1.5 MHz and 118–148 MHz and was fitted to US Army helicopters and observation aircraft from around 1950. The ARC Type 16 was their dedicated VAR airborne receiver, covering the 112–118 MHz VAR band with the appropriate circuitry to separate and compare the 90 Hz and 150 Hz visual sector tones. ARC was eventually acquired by Cessna Aircraft Company in 1959, who found the avionics business a natural complement to their general aviation airframe manufacturing.

Collins Radio — The Early VHF NAV Equipment

Jan asks directly whether Collins supplied airborne VAR equipment to Australia, and the answer is almost certainly yes. Collins Radio entered the airborne VHF navigation market in the early 1950s and was a dominant force by the mid-decade. Several pieces of evidence support Collins’ presence in the Australian VAR network:

  • Collins’ 51V-2 was a dedicated VHF aviation navigation receiver covering the 108–136 MHz range, directly applicable to VAR. It appears in Collins’ airborne equipment line from the early-to-mid 1950s and is known from surviving examples (including eBay listings with the part number 3R35-1).
  • The Collins 618M VHF communication transceivers — the same family Jan researched in the context of the SSS avionics suite — were introduced from January 1963 and could tune the VAR frequency band for communication in addition to navigation functions.
  • Collins’ broader penetration of the Australian aviation market through the 1950s and 1960s is confirmed by the later adoption of Collins SSS avionics for the airframe configurations discussed in our avionics correspondence series.
  • The DCA 1953 specification requires six-channel selectable receivers; Collins was one of very few manufacturers in the world in 1953 capable of supplying certified VHF navigation receivers meeting this specification for the Australian market.
ⓘ Research note on Collins VAR equipment: The specific Collins models certified for use on the Australian DCA VAR network are not fully documented in sources accessible without access to CASA (formerly DCA) historical records. The Australian Civil Aviation Historical Society & Airways Museum at Essendon Airport (airwaysmuseum.com) holds detailed records on the Australian VAR system and would be the best source for confirming specific Collins model approvals and the relative market shares of different manufacturers in Australia.

The Weston Instruments Cross-Pointer Indicator

Jan correctly identifies Weston Instruments as the principal supplier of the VAR cockpit indicator in the United States, with the Model 888 as the primary type. The Weston Model 888 was known by several designations depending on context: it appears in US military records as the ID-48/ARN course indicator (marked “Weston Model 888 Type 3Y2” on surviving examples), and in civil use as the Glide Path LOC Indicator Model 888 — the same instrument serving both VAR visual track and ILS localizer functions, as the 90/150 Hz tone comparison principle is identical in both systems.5

Variants of the Model 888 include the Type 3P1 (glide slope and LOC, used with ILS) and the Type 3Y2 (course indicator, used for VAR and LOC). The Weston Model 1172 that Jan mentions was a later version of the same instrument, updating the Model 888’s design for improved reliability and reduced maintenance. The Model 888 series is now a collector’s item, found at aircraft parts salvage dealers and occasionally at airshow autojumbles.

In Australia, the DCA 1953 specification describes the cross-pointer indicator’s blue and yellow sector arrangement in considerable detail. Whether Australian operators used Weston instruments specifically, or equivalent types from other manufacturers, is again a question best resolved by the Airways Museum at Essendon. The DCA publication does note that “usability and warning indicator” modifications were made to the horizontal pointer in some Australian installations — suggesting that Australian operators occasionally adapted the standard US equipment to local DCA requirements.

Known VAR Airborne Equipment Suppliers
Manufacturer
Equipment
Type
Notes
Aircraft Radio Corp.
(ARC / Cessna from 1959)
Type 16 VAR Receiver Dedicated VAR receiver Boonton, New Jersey. Identified by Jan SP5XZG. ARC was later acquired by Cessna in 1959. A pioneer name in US avionics; built the AN/ARC-5 WWII command sets.
Collins Radio Company 51V-2; later 618M series (VHF COM/NAV) VHF NAV receiver; VHF COM transceiver Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 51V-2 covers 108–136 MHz VHF NAV; compatible with VAR band. Collins was dominant in Australian civil aviation by the late 1950s.
Weston Instruments Model 888 (Types 3P1, 3Y2); Model 1172 Cross-pointer cockpit indicator US manufacturer. The standard VAR and ILS localiser indicator across both US and export markets. US military designation: ID-48/ARN. Found in Australian aircraft.
Bendix Radio Division Various VHF NAV receivers VHF NAV receiver Baltimore, Maryland. Major US avionics supplier; airborne VHF equipment from the late 1940s. Competition to Collins in civil market.
King Radio VHF NAV receivers (general aviation) VHF NAV receiver Olathe, Kansas. Founded 1948 to serve general aviation. Their VHF NAV receivers would have been compatible with VAR. Popular in Australian light aircraft.

Part V — VAR Timeline: From Invention to Retirement

VAR Global Timeline
Date
Event
1927US deploys LFRR (Low-Frequency Radio Range), 200–400 kHz, Adcock array, A-N aural beam. First widespread aerial radio navigation system. Australia does not adopt it.
1929Jimmy Doolittle makes world’s first completely “blind” flight using ARC beam radio equipment. Foundation of modern instrument landing systems.
1932–1934German Lorenz beam system developed and commercialised. Uses A-N interlocking principle at ~33 MHz VHF. Lorenz AG owned by ITT (US).
1936Australia experiments with Lorenz beacon at Sydney. DCA prefers it over LFRR for its VHF static immunity and visual indicator capability.
1937VAR first demonstrated at Indianapolis by US Bureau of Air Commerce. Designed to succeed LFRR: VHF frequency + visual indicator.
1938Kyeema DC-2 crash near Melbourne (25 October, 18 deaths). Galvanises Australian DCA into building Lorenz Aeradio network as emergency measure.
1939–1945World War II. LFRR/VAR development stalled by material shortages. VOR technology advances rapidly with wartime electronics R&D. Collins Radio becomes a major avionics manufacturer.
1941Experimental VAR airway established Chicago–New York. First operational proof of concept.
1943VOR “deemed practical.” US civil aviation authority already planning VOR deployment ahead of VAR.
1944–1948US builds 68–70 VAR stations on federal airways. First operational installation at Matawan, New Jersey (1944).
1946VOR first deployed in the United States. Offers 360 radials vs VAR’s four courses. VOR immediately superior for route flexibility.
1947–1950Australia builds initial 30-station VAR network to replace the Lorenz Aeradio system. Construction period spans three years.
1949US CAA bulletin already calls VAR stations “interim” facilities, only three years after VOR introduction.
Jan 1953Australia commissions VAR network; DCA Publication No. 19 (Operational Notes on VAR) published. Lorenz Aeradio retired after ~15 years of service.
1959ICAO decrees VOR + DME as the international standard. ARC (the Type 16 manufacturer) acquired by Cessna.
1960Last US VAR decommissioned. Australia continues operating ~50 VAR stations.
1960sVAR continues in Australia while VOR/DME deployment proceeds gradually. Collins SSS avionics enter Australian market; early Collins VHF NAV equipment already established.
1980Australian VAR network retired. Replaced by VOR + DME. Australia is the last nation to retire VAR — 20 years after the United States. End of an era.

Part VI — Direct Answers to Jan’s Questions

1. Had I heard of VAR?

Yes — it is a well-documented piece of aviation navigation history, though not commonly known outside of serious aviation history circles and those with an interest in early avionics. The system was essentially forgotten in the United States after 1960, but it remained very much alive in Australia for another two decades.

2. Was VAR popular in Australia during the Cold War?

It was not merely popular — it was the backbone of instrument flying in Australia from 1953 to 1980. Every instrument-rated pilot on the trunk routes between Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth flew VAR approaches and en-route tracks. Ansett Airlines, Trans-Australia Airlines (TAA), and all IFR general aviation operators depended on it. The Australian VAR network of approximately 50 stations was the most extensive outside the United States and the longest-lived anywhere in the world.

The “Cold War” framing is apt: Australia’s VAR network was a 1953 construction and remained in full service into the OPEC-crisis era. The pilots who trained on it and flew it every day worked in a Cold War world, and the system represented a technically conservative but entirely reliable approach that suited Australian conditions.

3. Which vendor of VAR equipment was most popular in Australia? Was it Collins?

The definitive answer to market share by manufacturer would require access to DCA/CASA historical equipment certification records, which are held at the Airways Museum at Essendon Airport, Melbourne. However, the weight of evidence strongly suggests:

  • Collins Radio was certainly a significant supplier of airborne VHF NAV equipment to the Australian market, particularly after the mid-1950s when Collins had established itself as the dominant name in professional avionics for airline and corporate aviation. The 51V-2 and its successors covered the VAR band.
  • ARC (Aircraft Radio Corporation) supplied the dedicated Type 16 VAR receiver and was a major early supplier, particularly before Collins’ complete dominance of the market. ARC’s Type 12 and Type 16 sets were widely used in US-sourced aircraft that came to Australia during and after WWII.
  • Weston Instruments Model 888 indicators were the standard cross-pointer instrument across the industry, used regardless of which receiver manufacturer was chosen. They would have been fitted in most Australian VAR-equipped aircraft.
  • For general aviation (light aircraft), King Radio VHF NAV receivers were popular from the late 1950s onwards, feeding the same Weston-type indicators.
✓ Short answer for Jan: Yes, the VAR was genuinely popular in Australia — it was the only instrument navigation system in Australia from 1953 to 1980. Collins was certainly among the key suppliers of airborne equipment for the Australian VAR network, particularly for airline and corporate aviation. For a definitive market-share answer, the Australian Civil Aviation Historical Society & Airways Museum at Essendon (airwaysmuseum.com) would be the right place to enquire — they hold the original DCA records and have members with direct operational experience of the Australian VAR era.

References & Sources

  1. Flying the Beams — “VAR: An Interim Step”flyingthebeams.com/its-fate. Comprehensive history of the VAR system in the US and Australia, including station counts and the Lorenz–VAR transition. The primary web source for VAR history.
  2. DCA Publication No. 19 (January 1953)Operational Notes on Visual-Aural Radio Range and Associated Marker Beacons. Commonwealth of Australia, Department of Civil Aviation. Reproduced at: airwaysmuseum.com and chingchic.com. The definitive primary source for the Australian VAR network at commissioning.
  3. Wikipedia — Visual Aural Radio Rangeen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_Aural_Radio_Range. References the 1953 DCA Publication No. 19 as a primary source.
  4. Wikipedia — Aircraft Radio Corporationen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_Radio_Corporation. History of ARC from 1924; Doolittle blind flight connection; acquisition by Cessna 1959.
  5. Weston Model 888 — US military designation ID-48/ARN — eBay item 127025585440 (Army aircraft ID-48/ARN course indicator, Weston Model 888 Type 3Y2); Automatic Aerospace parts listing; BAS Airplane Parts. Confirms Weston 888 as the standard VAR/ILS localiser cross-pointer instrument.
  6. Australian Civil Aviation Historical Society & Airways Museumairwaysmuseum.com. Essendon Airport, Victoria. Holds original DCA records, Lorenz beam documentation, VAR network records, and operating-era photographs. Recommended for primary source research on Australian VAR equipment specifics.
  7. 1938 Kyeema crashen.wikipedia.org/wiki/1938_Kyeema_crash. The catalyst for Australia’s Lorenz Aeradio network, the direct predecessor to VAR.
  8. Collins Aerospace Museum Products Databasecollinsaerospacemuseum.org/products/. Collins product line including 51V-2 airborne VHF NAV receiver.
  9. Jan SP5XZG — enquiry email, 28 March 2026. Identified the 1967 Australian DCA reference document; ARC Type 16; Weston Model 888 and 1172; Collins early VHF NAV equipment; raised question of Australian market dominance.

Footnotes

  1. The Kyeema crash of October 1938 and its role in accelerating Australian radio navigation infrastructure is documented in multiple aviation history sources. Standard Telephone and Cable (STC) as the installer of the Lorenz Aeradio network is confirmed by the Australian Civil Aviation Historical Society.
  2. The VAR development chronology is sourced from flyingthebeams.com and Wikipedia. The demonstration in 1937, the Chicago–New York experimental airway of 1941, and the 1944 first operational installation at Matawan, New Jersey are consistent across multiple sources.
  3. DCA Publication No. 19, January 1953, states: “The VAR network, consisting initially of 30 beacons established along the major air routes, replaced the twenty year old system of 33 Mc ‘Lorenz’ beacons.” The reference to a “twenty year old” system dates the Lorenz network to approximately 1933–1936, consistent with the Lorenz beam’s commercial introduction and Australia’s 1936 experiments.
  4. Aircraft Radio Corporation Wikipedia article: ARC originated in 1924 in Boonton, New Jersey; Jimmy Doolittle’s 1929 blind flight connection; manufacturer of AN/ARC-5 and predecessor ATA/ARA command sets; acquisition by Cessna in 1959.
  5. Weston Model 888 documentation from eBay item 127025585440 (US Army ID-48/ARN course indicator), Automatic Aerospace parts listing (classified as “Glide Indicator” per TSO function), and BAS Airplane Parts (Model 888 Type 3P1 glide slope/LOC indicator). The National Museum of American History (Smithsonian) also holds a Weston Model 888 Attitude Indicator in its collection.
73 — de Mike Peace VK6ADA  /  r-390a.net Administrator  •  March 2026
✍ Mike Peace VK6ADA  /  r-390a.net Administrator vk6ada.com.au — Collins Radio, Aviation History & Amateur Radio Technical Resource