The USAAF inactivated the aircraft warning network in April 1944.[3]: 38 By June 1944 AWC volunteers "assigned to filter centers serve[d] on the same days that ground observers are on duty" (information centers continued processing radar information 24 hours a day, e.g., plotting radar tracks).[4]: 97
^ abHistory of Strategic and Ballistic Missile Defense, 1945-1955: Volume I(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 23 September 2013. Stations were undermanned, personnel lacked training, and repair and maintenance were difficult. This stop-gap system later would be replaced by a 75-station, permanent net authorized by Congress and approved by the President in 1949 … To be closer to ConAC, ARAACOM moved to Mitchel AFB, New York on 1 November 1950.
^Arnold, Henry H.--Foreword (June 1944) [May 1944]. AAF: The Official Guide to the Army Air Forces (Special Edition for AAF Organizations ed.). New York: Pocket Books. Aircraft Warning Corps—The Aircraft Warning Corps includes all those volunteers in filter and information centers of our continental fighter commands who are on the receiving end of the ground observers' reports. At its peak this corps numbered more than 25,000. Like the GOC, the Aircraft Warning Corps is now also on an alert status; those assigned to filter centers serve on the same days that ground observers are on duty. Information centers, however, differ in this respect: radar information comes in to them 24 hours a day; continuous operation is demanded of that portion of the AWC required to plot radar information.
^subj: Development of Radar Equipment for Detecting and Countering Missiles of the German A-4 type, USAFHRC microfilm, 27 December 1946{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (cited by Schaffel, p. 314)
^Futrell, Robert F. (July 1947). Development of AAF Base Facilities in the United States: 1939-1945 (Report). Vol. ARS-69: US Air Force Historical Study No 69 (Copy No. 2). Air Historical Office. The radar school, moved from Scott to Morrison Field in February 1942, was transferred to occupy a leased club at Boca Raton, Fla, in May 1942. Additional cantonment housing and an airfield were subsequently built for this school.132 (p. 113)
^Air Defense Command. Organization and Responsibility for Air Defense, March 1946–September 1955. CONAD. (cited by Volume I, p. 132)