AN/APG-66
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AN/APG-66
Summary
AN/APG-66 is a model series[1]. AN/APG-66 draws 189 Wikipedia views per month (model_series category, ranking #56 of 263).[2]
Key Facts
- AN/APG-66's image is recorded as F-16 Flight Test Radar, later designated AN-APG-66, Westinghouse, 1974 - National Electronics Museum - DSC00411.JPG[3].
- AN/APG-66's instance of is recorded as model series[4].
- AN/APG-66's instance of is recorded as product model[5].
- AN/APG-66's operator is recorded as United States Navy[6].
- AN/APG-66's operator is recorded as United States Air Force[7].
- AN/APG-66's operator is recorded as U.S. Customs and Border Protection[8].
- AN/APG-66's operator is recorded as Republic of China Air Force[9].
- AN/APG-66's operator is recorded as Japan Air Self-Defense Force[10].
- AN/APG-66's operator is recorded as Royal New Zealand Air Force[11].
- AN/APG-66's manufacturer is recorded as Westinghouse Electric Corporation[12].
- AN/APG-66's subclass of is recorded as pulse-Doppler radar[13].
- AN/APG-66's Commons category is recorded as AN/APG-66[14].
- AN/APG-66's country of origin is recorded as United States[15].
- AN/APG-66's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/07wmv_[16].
- AN/APG-66's Joint Electronics Type Designation Automated System designation is recorded as AN/APG-66[17].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include model series[4] and product model[5].
Why It Matters
AN/APG-66 draws 189 Wikipedia views per month (model_series category, ranking #56 of 263).[2] AN/APG-66 has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] AN/APG-66 is known by 501 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]