FUG 10

German FUG 10 airforce radio installation

FUG 10 means: Funk Gerät 10.

The Fug 10 is a very complex installation for communication  between airoplane to airoplane (Bord zu Bord) and from airoplane to ground (Bord zu Boden). It consists of several receivers and transmitters for the shortwave and long wave and a lot of remote controlls. In other circumstances it is combined with navigation purposes. (Peil G6 with EZ6 receiver, then called Fug 10 P).

The transmitters are very stable in frequency, by using special temperature compensating arangements  in the oscillator circuit. Consider, that this oscillator is not crystal controlled. The heat inside the cabinet is very high, because the principle is a MOPA transmitter in a very small cabinet. The oscillator valve is RL12P35, which much deliver much driving power to the power amplifier. This power amplifier has to deliver about 60 watts to the antenna at CW mode, by use of 2 RL12P35’s.

This arrangement was not only the use of ceramic material, but also a special condenser block in the circuit of the oscillator. These condensers had a big dielectric loss with a particular temperature coefficient. More about this a extended explanation n the post EZ6 DIRECTION FINDER.

Kl-details-Lorenz-C5-Block-1-2

Bordfunk 010

Displayed in the picture above my Fug 10 equipment. It is in working condion! I use the the short wave transmitter and receiver in the 80 meters amateur  band and made several contacts. The frequence stability is amazing!

Most units (EK,EL,SK FBG3, SchK13 and U10E ) are in working condition. Upper row “Funkerschaltkasten (switchbox), EK receiver  (shortwave 3-6 Mc), EL receiver (long wave 300-600 Kc). Mid row “Fernbediengerat” FBG3 (tuning the antenne tuners, switching antennes etc.), SK (shortwave transmitter), SL (longwave transmitter). Lower row “Eigenverstandigung Verstarker” RG 10 (intercom amplifier etc.) , “Umformer” U10 e (rotating power transformer for the receivers).At the back of the rack are placed, not visible on the picture,  the AAG2 antenna tuner and the transmitter  rotary transformer U10S.

fug10b

Picture above: an older picture,  close-up of the units.

On the left lower row, a important control unit, the FBG 3, explained later in the post. At the front 2 knobs for tuning the AAG for matching the antenna to the transmitters for long wave and short wave. One knob for long wave (blue) and the other for short wave (red) . This knob is mechanical attached to a synchro motor system. In the mid the antenna current meter. With the big switch, with scale, in the mid, you can switch the transmitters either for long wave are short wave and which antenna to be chosen. Normally one short  antenna f

or short wave, and a long antenna, the trailing antenna, for longwave. It is possible to change the long wave transmitter from trailing antenna to short antenna, so the short wave transmitter from the short one to the long one. This in case, one of the antennas is broken.

Fug10002

In the above picture you can see at the left de ADb ‘s (Anschluss Dose ). In this case a ADb13 type. It is a remote connectionbox for the microphone-telephones in the oxygencaps of the crew. At the right the U-10-e rotarytransformer for the receivers.

Fug10005

On this picture above,  you can see the trailing antenne  type AH-10. At the front of the “Funker Schalt Kasten” is a switch to move the antenna wire up or down. Also a indication meter is placed, for how far the trailing antenna is released.

FUG 10 met AAG3

The FUG 10 with the fully working AAG 3. Note that the trailing antenna is also there, which came later in the collection.

AAG

The AAG on the testbank. Just to be seen, the schematic diagram and wire connections.

DSC02938

The inside of the AAG. Left the vacuum relay. When pushing down the CW key, the relay comes up. When releasing, it falls down again after a few seconds. This is working very well and pleasant. Above the long wave variometer. Above the variometer, the indication scale of the tuned frequency, the same scale is on the FBG3 control. Both he scales are turning synchron with tuning.

DSC02939

Another view of the AAG. At the left, the short wave variometer to be seen. Just in the mid, the synchro -motor for driving the variometer coils. This motor is driving by a “Drehfeld  System” , a kind of electrical achs, coming from a same type of synchro in the FBG3. This synchro is turned by hand with a knob, with same scale as on the AAG, to tune the match.

DSC02934

A nice look to the vacum antenna relay. It can be activated (transmit and receive) by 2 coils, seen on the picture.

gg

Picture above the AAG on the testbank. All wired up to let it work. The schematic left from it Lateron it was connected original to FBG 3. To see in the display of my FUG 10.

Posted in airforce radio ww2, German_arircraft radio ww2.

3 Comments

  1. Hi,

    I have one question. On your website you show the AAG3 (probably very similar to AAG2). On the side, wher the cable intake is, there is a dark-green HF-element with ceramic endcap mounted horizontally. It has 2 contacts numbered in red “3” and “4” I think. Between these contacts a swinging antenna contact is moving circularly.

    At the crashsite of a Bf-110 I found exactly this dark-green high frequency element (maybe a dummy load for the antenna tuning process. Can you tell me, if this sort of antenna tuner was always mounted in a German bomber or fighter plane? Was it a fix component to the FuG10?

    Thank you very much

    Edgar Schlimm

    Berliner Straße 69
    58511 Luedenscheid

    Germany

    • Hi Edgar,

      The darkgreen component is a condensor of the ceramic type.
      The AAG’s (2 and 3) were a standard antennatuner for the FUG 10 radio installation. It was used for matching the “Festantenne” for common use on shortwave , and for the “Schleppantennen” for longwave. The AAG2 was used standard for shortwave, the AAG3 for longwave. In case of for instance, that the “Schleppantennen” was destroyed, the AAG 3 was tuned on the “Festantennen”. So the same procedure for the case of the the “Festantennern”. This switching was happening in the “FBG3” unit.
      Regards Peter

  2. HI Impressive,
    I just bough the FUG 10 EK from eBay. My first German war time radio. building the PS to get it working, hopefully.
    By the way, you know of any one out there able to get the 10-pin power receptable a the rear?
    Eddy

Comments are closed.