- published: 11 Aug 2016
- views: 1618
A signal corps is a military branch, responsible for military communications (signals). Many countries maintain a signal corps, which is typically subordinate to a country's army.
Military communication usually consists of radio, telephone, and digital communications.
Signal is one of the United States Army's basic branches.
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This is the video I made for the Signal Regimental Ball for 1st Signal Brigade in Korea. This video is supposed to detail the history of the Signal Corps and their direct effects to the battlefield and mission command through tactical communications. All voices for the video were provided by my Soldiers and myself listed in the credits at the end. Vietnam War radio chatter is actual radio chatter found online. Gulf War radio chatter was pulled from Generation Kill. Music is by John Williams and Hans Zimmer
In keeping with the 21st century vision of the Corps of Signals 'to achieve electronic and information superiority for effective functioning of the Indian Army', the Corps has embarked upon a multidimensional and challenging task of establishing a converged, robust, broad band and secure IT infrastructure, at peace and operational locations of the Indian Army. India Defence Youtube Channel http://www.youtube.com/Indiadefence A holistic approach has been adopted to develop the Communication and IT infrastructure in all its dimensions. ASCON Phase III, fully redundant and secure backbone network already implemented and presently project ASCON Phase IV is under implementation to cover voids. Also state of the art Zonal/Metro access networks have been established at a number of stations...
more at http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links.html 'This is the story of the United States Army Signal Corps. An Army has been compared with a man, responding the way a man responds to danger. And it has nerves -- an intricate but vast sensory system spreading throughout the entire body, giving it sight, the ability to hear and the power to communicate. This complex nervous system which sensitizes the Army has a name. It is the Signal Corps. Throughout the world, wherever the Army stands, the Signal Corps keeps it alert. In making this picture, the camera crews visited Signal Corps engineering laboratories at Fort Monmouth, N.J., and the Army Electronic Proving Ground at Fort Huachuca, Arizona. Television audiences will look at a simulated battlefield of the future, and see ...
The Arm Behind the Army is a sensational propaganda film produced by the US Army Signal Corps in 1942 to encourage the home front to participate in war production -- the "Arm Behind the Army". The film uses stock footage of both Japan and Germany, along with driving score and urgent narration, to promote "outproducing the Axis". This type of appeal was especially important in this era, as there was worry that labor unrest and strikes could torpedo the war effort. The film begins with a short outline of American military history, noting that each war has advanced military technology a little further, from the muskets of the Revolutionary War in 1776, to Thaddeus Lowe's observation ballon in the Civil War, the gatling gun, and the tanks and airplanes of the First World War. The various a...
1940s Army receiver made by Farnsworth Television and Radio. Used and abused, weighs 62 pounds and is all metal, no plastic in this radio. Took fairly little to get the radio working it needs to be totally recapped and have many of the resistors replaced. Radio is working amazingly well considering condition of the parts. Kilroy was here is an American popular culture expression that became popular during World War II; it is typically seen in graffiti.
A video showing the starting and operation of the US Army Signal Corps Generator GN-51-A. This 300 Watt generator was used to power (among other items) portable aircraft beacons. The two-cycle motor is a little smoky at start-up but it runs very well for a 1942 produced device!
Motorcycles with side cars! Lots of them. A field wireless set in action. Lots of cool WWI technology, telegraph operations, installing cable, etc.
Portable field kitchens approach Colombey. 310th Engineers raze a house in Sommerance. 304th, 305th, and 322nd Field Signal Bn. troops string telephone lines. Signal Corps troops erect telephone poles, send messages with heliographic lamps and semaphores; and operate field radios. French women operate Signal Corps switchboards in La Belle-Epine and Paris. Shows captured German defenses and a trench radio is assembled near Chatillon. Wires are spliced. Signal Corps troops are reviewed at Cour-Cheverny.
This fascinating 1943 U.S. Navy training film shows "How to Signal" using flag hoists, semaphore, and blinker to present morse code messages. The film was produced by F.H. Hargove of the Prior Motion Picture Company in New York and supposedly narrated by "Radcliffe Hall" (like a pseudonym for a radio announcer). A review in "Motor Boating" magazine noted that "the film shows pictorially how to learn the codes in the International Flag, Semaphore and Blinker systems of Communication. Expert signal men in the U.S. service serve as instructors and demonstrate the correct methods of using these three methods. It is designed so that the film may be repeated again and again until the student becomes familiar with the signal flags and positions of the semaphore, and the light flashes of the blink...
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Subscribe for for More police chases, dashcam footage, Crash footage, CCTV cam footage OF intense robberies and more!! - ALSO!! old vintage public domain footage featuring old commercials, old military footage, airforce footage, nasa and space exploration footage, Inside and viewing the inner working of factories, videos about construction, machinery, cars, trucks and MORE!!. THANKS FOR WATCHING!! SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE - THis channel is ALL about chases -- ++cRAZZY dashcam footage -- crazy Crash footage -- insane``CCTV cam footage -- Intense police bodycam footage -- Crash footage, muggings, insane gang shootings and more. ------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE for daily updates and feel free to send me any videos you may like to share,, Thanks for looking!! Als...
This 1976 Army film explores the history of the United States Army Signal Corps. The United States Army Signal Corps (USASC) develops, tests, provides, and manages communications and information systems support for the command and control of combined arms forces. It was established in 1860, the brainchild of United States Army Major Albert J. Myer, and has had an important role from the American Civil War through to the current day. Over its history, it had the initial responsibility for a number of functions and new technologies that are currently managed by other organizations, including military intelligence, weather forecasting, and aviation. The Signal Corps mission statement is as follows: Support for the command and control of combined arms forces. Signal support includes Network Op...
U.S. Army Signal Corps - War Department Official Film: Misc. #1190 "These scenes of conditions Found in liberated prison and concentration camps are from the official film received by the Army Pictorial Service from Signal corps photographic units." Ardeantine Caves, Italy | Massacre of FFI Men, Paris, France | Paris Torture Chambers | Gambsheim, France | Bande, Belgium | Arnstadt Concentration Camp | Leipzig Concentration Camp - Gardelegen | Penig Concentration Camp | Ohrduf Labor Camp | Hadamar Concentration Camp | Meppene Concentration Camp - Stalag VI-C | Munster Concentration Camp - Stalag VI-F | Demonstration of Gestapo Methods | Nordhausen Slave Labor Camp | Hanover Concentration Camp | Buchenwald Concentration Camp | Footage Description: Corpses of Italians executed by the Nazis...
This circa 1950s episode of "The Big Picture," shows the role of the Army Signal Corps with battlefield communication, the equipment used by Korean War Soldiers, and the efforts to find new ways to communicate.
Creator(s): Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Chief Signal Officer. 9/18/1947-2/28/1964 (Most Recent) Series: Historical Films, ca. 1914 - ca. 1936 Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 - 1985 Production Date: 1936 Sound Type: Silent Scope & Content: Reel 1, troops set up and operate field radios and signal lamps on the Yale campus. Shows Yale Pres. A.T. Hadley and Anson Phelps Stokes. Reel 2, wire is strung and switchboards set up on the campus. Graduates receive certificates. Troops at Camp Meade adjust and use signal flags. Reel 3, troops and college students parade at Columbia Univ. Reel 4, stereoscopic slides are prepared at Cornell Univ. Lantern slides are made and placed in an aerial camera. Aerial photos are shot, de...
This fascinating 1943 U.S. Navy training film shows "How to Signal" using flag hoists, semaphore, and blinker to present morse code messages. The film was produced by F.H. Hargove of the Prior Motion Picture Company in New York and supposedly narrated by "Radcliffe Hall" (like a pseudonym for a radio announcer). A review in "Motor Boating" magazine noted that "the film shows pictorially how to learn the codes in the International Flag, Semaphore and Blinker systems of Communication. Expert signal men in the U.S. service serve as instructors and demonstrate the correct methods of using these three methods. It is designed so that the film may be repeated again and again until the student becomes familiar with the signal flags and positions of the semaphore, and the light flashes of the blink...
Report from the Aleutians is a 47-minute documentary propaganda film produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps about the Aleutian Islands Campaign during World War II. It was directed and narrated by John Huston. A cinematic record of US military operations on the Aleutian Island of Adak to retake Japanese occupied Kiska. 1944 Academy Award Nominated for an Oscar for "Best Documentary Feature." Department of Defense - PIN 20347
more at http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links.html On US Army Signal Corps field telephones and telegraphs, switchboards, laying field telephone line wires, use of field telephones, etc. Filmed at Fort Benning, Georgia. US Army Training Film TF-13 Public domain film from the US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied. The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_telephone Field telephones are mobile telephones intended for military use, designed to w...
U.S. Army training film # TF-13, Signal Communication Within The Infantry Regiment. National Archives Identifier: 36279 Local Identifier: 111-TF-13 Creator(s): War Department. Office of the Chief Signal Officer.