When used properly, the system made enemy night fighter communications almost impossible. The Germans referred to ABC as ‘dudelsack’, German for bagpipes, in reference to the warbling sound of the transmitters. The system was later supplanted by Jostle IV, which barraged the entire band, beginning on 30 June 1944.
About Airborne Cigar in brief

The Cigar system was eventually replaced by the ‘Jostle V’ system, which was used until the end of the war in 1945. The ‘Cigar system’ was later replaced by a new system known as the � ‘Tinsel’. This consisted of an HF receiver that the operator could scan through the German frequencies listening for any signals. When they found one being used, they would set their transmitter to the same frequency and send out a signal from a microphone next to the aircraft’s engine. The frequencies being used by the controllers were not searched out by the radio operator in the aircraft but instead by the Y service signals intercept stations in England. These were then forwarded to aircraft in coded terms during the half-hour scheduled Group Operational messages sent from Bomber Command. This resulted in the “Special Tinsel” concept, introduced in June 1943. Because VHF transmitters of the required power were large, this was built into a ground-based operation for the first time in July 1943, when it was first used on the day of the Battle of the Somme. The Tinsel system became increasingly effective, and by the spring of 1943, the Y Service was reporting that more and more of the successes being reported by German night fighters were those operating on the newer VHF bands.
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This page is based on the article Airborne Cigar published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 08, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






