I can provide some information on that, ashaman, probably volo can provide more.
The radar stations at the time of the Battle of Britain were just tall radio masts. They sent out pulses and received echoes back - and could calculate range from the elapsed time. They did NOT give any guidance on height; and a single station couldn't find the direction either.
Direction was calculated by triangulation. There was a chain of stations (in fact, the whole system was called 'Chain Home'). If you had two stations fifty miles apart, and they reported the ranges from their respective positions, you could draw a triangle with a 'base' of 50 miles that showed where the enemy was.
Chain Home didn't give much coverage inland either. Once over Britain, German formations were tracked (and their heights estimated) mainly by the Royal Observer Corps, using binoculars and the Mark One Eyeball!







