Bond and Woodward W5 has acquired a unique status among amateur and professional clockmakers alike and in 2017 Woodward was delighted to be informed that W5 had been accepted into the Collection of the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers as an outstanding example of 20th century horology. The Collection is on public display in the Clockmakers Museum at the Science Museum, South Kensington. HONOURS C Two decades after he retired, the diversity of his work for the MoD was recognised when in 2000 a new building for information technology was named after him on the site of the former RSRE. The Royal Academy of Engineering gave Woodward in 2005 its first Lifetime Achievement Award, recognizing him as an outstanding pioneer of Radar and for his work in precision mechanical horology. APRIL 2018 C C Woodward has received many honours for his work in both radar and horology. C C In 2009, he received the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Denis J Picard Medal for Radar Technologies and Applications for 'pioneering work of fundamental importance in radar waveform design including the Woodward Ambiguity Function'. He was awarded the Tompion Gold Medal in 2009 from the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers, for services to precision mechanical horology. For ten years Woodward held an honorary professorship in Electrical Engineering at the University of Birmingham and for a further ten years was a visiting Professor in Cybernetics at the University of Reading. In person Woodward was a kind and generous man with boundless enthusiasm for everything he did. It took only a few minutes of conversation for the power of his intellect to become apparent. He had a rare combination of charisma and intelligence which remained undimmed to the last. His wife Alice pre-deceased him after a marriage of 57 years. Philip Mayne Woodward DSc was born on 6 September 1919 and died 30 January 2018. IEEE A&E SYSTEMS MAGAZINE 57