PART 2
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF TORPEDOES
Note: Characteristics given are for warshot torpedoes. Weights
indicated for these torpedoes include warhead fuel, etc.
59/60 Reverse Blank
Howell Torpedo |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
CIRCA 1880
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1890-1898 |
The Howell Torpedo was named for its inventor, U.S. Navy LCDR John A.
Howell. (He later became a Rear Admiral.) This torpedo was the only U.S.
torpedo of its era (circa 1880) to attain enough success to be produced in
quantity. The power for the Howell was received from a flywheel prespun before
launch. In 1889, the U.S. Navy ordered 50 Howell Torpedoes from the Hotchkiss
Ordnance Co., Providence, R.I., who had purchased the rights to the torpedo
from Howell. This torpedo was used as an antisurface ship, battleship- and
torpedo boat-launched weapon until 1898 when it was supplanted by the Whitehead
Torpedo. An actual photograph of the Howell is shown on page 17.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 132 inches |
Diameter | 14.2 inches |
Weight | 580 pounds |
Propulsion | Prespun flywheel |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro effect of the flywheel |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | None |
Warhead | 100 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | Contact device |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | = 25 knots |
Range | 400 yards (800 when flywheel runs down) |
|
61
Whitehead Torpedo Mk1 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
CIRCA 1892
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
3.55 M 1894-1913, 5 M 1894-1922 |
Early accounts indicate that there were two versions of the Whitehead
Torpedo Mk 1: a 3.55-meter (140-inch) version and a 5-meter (197-inch)
version. The longer Mk I carried nearly twice the explosive charge (220
pounds) of the short version and was fitted with the Obry steering gear (gyro
control in azimuth). The Whitehead Mk 1 (both lengths) was a "cold" running
torpedo; the three-cylinder reciprocating engine ran on cold, compressed air
which was stored in a section of the torpedo called the air flask. The E. W.
Bliss Co., Brooklyn, N.Y., was the manufacturer of this torpedo for the U.S.
Navy. It was used as an antisurface ship, battleship- and torpedo
boat-launched weapon.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
|
| 3.55 M | 5 M |
Length | 140 inches | 197 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches | 17.7 inches |
Weight | 845 pounds | 1160 pounds |
Propulsion | 3-cylinder reciprocating | 3-cylinder reciprocating |
Enabling | No | No |
Guidance | Depth control | Depth control, gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 1350 psi | 1350 psi |
Homing | No | No |
FC Settings | Preset | Preset |
Warhead | 118 pounds wet guncotton | 220 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 1* Contact | War Nose Mk 1* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
|
Speed | 26.5 knots | 27.5 knots |
Range | 800 yards | 800 yards |
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
62
Whitehead Torpedo Mk 1 (3.55 meter)
Whitehead Torpedo Mk 1 (5 meter)
63
Whitehead Torpedo Mk2 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
CIRCA 1893
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
3.55 M 1896-1913, 5 M 189/-1922 |
There were two versions of the antisurface ship Whitehead Torpedo Mk 2;
one was 3.55 meters (140 inches) in length while the second was 5 meters (197
inches) long. Both versions were 45 centimeters (17.7 inches) in diameter.
The 5-meter Mk 2 had twice the range of the 3.55-meter Mk 2 (1500 yards versus
800 yards) and had a 10-percent increase in explosive charge (132 pounds
versus 118 pounds). The 5-meter Mk 2 was probably based on the 5-meter Mk 1
rather than being a modification of the 3.55-meter Mk 2. This latter torpedo
was identical to the 3.55-meter Mk 1 except for mechanical details. For the
5-meter Mk 2 within the 5-meter Mk 1 envelope, the capacity of the air flask
was increased by 20 percent and the air flask pressure was increased from 1350
psi to 1500 psi. The launch platforms were battleships and torpedo boats.
Whitehead Torpedo Mk 2 (3.55 meter)
Whitehead Torpedo Mk 2 (5 meter)
64
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
|
| 3.55 M | 5 M |
Length | 140 inches | 197 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches | 17.7 inches |
Weight | 845 pounds | 1232 pounds |
Propulsion | 3-cylinder reciprocating | 3-cylinder reciprocating |
Enabling | No | No |
Guidance | Depth control | Depth control |
Flask Air Pressure | 1350 psi | 1500 psi |
Homing | No | No |
FC Settings | Preset | Preset |
Warhead | 118 pounds wet guncotton | 132 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 1* Contact | War Nose Mk 1* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
|
Speed | 27 knots | 28.5 knots |
Range | 800 yards | 1500 yards |
*War Nose Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
65
Whitehead Torpedo Mk3 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
CIRCA 1893
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
3.55M 1898-1922 |
Unlike Whitehead Torpedoes Mk 1 and Mk 2, there was only one version of
the Whitehead Mk 3 torpedo, the 3.55-meter. The main difference between the
3.55-meter Whitehead Mk 3 and the previous versions of this length was the
inclusion of the Obry steering gear (gyro) for azimuth control. According to
U.S. Navy acceptance tests for the Whitehead type torpedo, the maximum
deviation right or left of the target was reduced from 24 to 8 yards in the
Whitehead Mk 3. About 100 Torpedoes Mk 3 were purchased from the E. W. Bliss
Co., and in 1913, redesignated Torpedo Type A. The Whitehead Torpedo Mk 3 was
withdrawn from service use in 1922 when all torpedoes designed prior to
Torpedo Mk 7, were condemned in favor of more modern weapons.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 140 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches |
Weight | 845 pounds |
Propulsion | 3-cylinder |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | 118 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 1* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | = 26.5 knots |
Range | 800 yards |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
66
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk1 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1904
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1904-1922 |
After the E.W. Bliss Co. had manufactured Whitehead Torpedoes for several
years, one of the company's engineers, F. Leavitt, developed a turbine-driven
antisurface ship torpedo which was designated the Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 1.
In addition to the engine change, the air flask pressure of the new weapon was
increased to 2250 psi (vice 1500 psi for the Whitehead units). The air in the
new model was heated by burning alcohol in a chamber upstream from the
engine. The increased air flask pressure and heated air served to increase
the range of the Bliss-Leavitt Mk 1 to 4000 yards at 27 knots. (The range was
1500 yards at 28.5 knots for the 5-meter Whitehead Mk 2.) This torpedo, in
service on battleships, torpedo boats, and cruisers, used a single vertical
turbine wheel rotating about the torpedo's longitudinal axis and driving a
single propeller. The unbalanced torque was sufficient to cause the Mk 1 to
have a tendency to roll.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 197 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | approx. 1500 pounds |
Propulsion | Single vertical turbine wheel |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2250 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | approx. 200 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 1* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 27 knots |
Range | 4000 yards |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
67
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk2 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1905
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1905-1922 |
The Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 2 was a "hot running" (propelled by heated
air), 21-inch (in diameter) torpedo used on battleships, torpedo boats, and
cruisers. This antisurface ship torpedo, developed by the E.W. Bliss Co.,
Brooklyn, N.Y., was the first weapon to use two contrarotating turbines with
each driving a propeller. The development eliminated the unbalanced torque
which had contributed to the tendency of the Bliss-Leavitt Mk 1 to roll. About
250 units were manufactured by the E.W. Bliss Co. for the U.S. Navy.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 197 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | approx. 1500 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine (contra- rotating) |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2250 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | approx. 200 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 5* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 26 knots |
Range | 3500 yards |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
68
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk3 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1906
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1906-1922 |
Developed and manufactured by the E.W. Bliss Co., Brooklyn, N.Y., the
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 3 was very similar to the Bliss-Leavitt Mk 2. This
torpedo was a "hot running," 21-inch (in diameter) antisurface ship torpedo
used on battleships, torpedo boats, and cruisers. The main difference between
Mk 2 and Mk 3 was that the Mk 3 had an increased range (4000 yards versus 3500
yards for Mk 2). Approximately 200 Bliss-Leavitt Torpedoes Mk 3 were produced
for the U.S. Navy.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 197 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | approx. 1500 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine (contra- rotating) |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2250 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | approx. 200 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 5* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 26 knots |
Range | 4000 yards |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
69
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk4 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1908
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1908-1922 |
The Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 4, an 18-inch antisurface ship weapon, was
the first torpedo specifically designed for submarine launching. (Earlier
torpedoes were used on battleships and cruisers.) Developed and produced by
the E.W. Bliss Co., about 100 of these units were purchased by the U.S. Navy
for experimental purposes. The experiments with the Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk
4 led to design improvements to the gyro and the reducing valve. In 1922, the
torpedo and all other torpedoes designed prior to Torpedo Mk 7, were
considered obsolete and withdrawn from service use.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 197 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches |
Weight | approx. 1500 pounds |
Propulsion | Vertical turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2250 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | Info not available |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 1* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | Info not available |
Range | Info not available |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
70
Whitehead Torpedo Mk5 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
CIRCA 1901
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1910-1922 |
A "hot running" (powered by heated air) torpedo of Whitehead design, the
Mk 5 torpedo was the first torpedo to be manufactured by the Naval Torpedo
Station in Newport, R.I. (1908). The Mk 5 was similar in performance to the
Bliss-Leavitt torpedoes of that era, and approximately 500 units were produced
by the Torpedo Station and Vickers Ltd. of England. This torpedo was doomed,
however, by a major technological advancement (increased efficiency and range)
in the Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 7 which came soon after the Mk 5 was produced.
The Mk 5 was the first to permit the firing ship to vary speed and range. The
Mk 5 was accomplished by adjustment of the reducing valve prior to tube
loading. The Mk 5 was used on battleships, torpedo boats, and submarines, and
was an antisurface ship weapon.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 204 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches |
Weight | 1452 pounds |
Propulsion | 4-cylinder reciprocating |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2100 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | 200 pounds wet guncotton |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 5* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | |
Low | 27 knots |
Medium | 36 knots |
High | 40 knots |
Range | |
Low | 4000 yards |
Medium | 2000 yards |
High | 1000 yards |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
71
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk6 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1911
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1911-1922 |
The Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 6 was an 18-inch antisurface ship torpedo
designed for above-water tubes and could be launched from destroyers and
cruisers. It featured a main engine that was a horizontal turbine rather than
the vertical turbine used on all other Bliss-Leavitt torpedoes. The Mk 6
depth and gyro controls were also combined into one unit as another design
change. Although the Mk 6 torpedo reached speeds up to 35 knots, its range
was conversely reduced to 2000 yards. About 100 units were manufactured by
the E.W. Bliss Co.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 204 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches |
Weight | approx. 1800 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2250 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | Info not available |
Exploder | War Nose Mk 5* Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 35 |
Range | 2000 |
|
*War Noses Mk 1, Mk 2, and Mk 5 were used interchangeably.
72
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk7 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1911
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1912-1945 |
Torpedo Mk 7, a submarine/destroyer-launched antisurface ship torpedo, was
a major step forward in the evolution of the modern torpedo. It featured the
introduction of water into the combustion pot to cool the combustion gases and
produce steam. Propulsive efficiency was increased which, in turn, resulted
in an increase in the range. Developed by the Bliss-Leavitt Co., Brooklyn,
N.Y., and the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., Torpedo Mk 7 was issued to
the Fleet in 1912 and remained in service through World War II. This torpedo
was also in development/experimentation as an aircraft-launched weapon in the
early 1920s.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 204 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches |
Weight | 1628 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Flask Air Pressure | 2000/2500 psi (depending on mod) |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 7 Mod 5 326 pounds TNT or TPX |
Exploder | Mk 3 Mod 1 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 35 |
Range | 3500/6000 yards (depending on mod) |
|
73
Short Torpedo Mk7 (Type D) |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1917
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NO RECORD OF SERVICE USE |
The Type D Torpedo was a shorter version of the Mk 7 torpedo. Developed
by Washington Navy Yard, Washington, D.C., in order to fit certain submarine
torpedo tubes, the Mk 7 air flask was shortened and the weight of the warhead
was reduced. The fuel and water tanks were relocated to obtain more air flask
capacity on the Type D. The fuel tank was mounted in the aft air flask
bulkhead while the water tanks were mounted in the afterbody. The overall
weight of the warshot torpedo, as compared to the Mk 7, was 590 pounds lighter
and 58 inches shorter. In addition, air, fuel and water capacities were
approximately one-third of the capacities found in the Mk 7 torpedo. This
torpedo was never produced in quantity.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 144 inches |
Diameter | 17.7 inches |
Weight | 1036 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2250 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Total weight- 281 |
Exploder | Mk 3 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 35 |
Range | = 2000 yards |
|
74
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 8 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1911
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1911-1945 |
Developed during World War I, the Mk 8 was the U.S. Navy's first 21-inch
by 21-foot torpedo. The Naval Torpedo Station at Newport, R.I., the Torpedo
Station in Alexandria, Va., and the U.S.N. Gun Factory in Washington, D.C.
were all involved in the production of this destroyer-launched, antisurface
ship torpedo which was still in the inventory at the start of the second World
War. Approximately 600 Mk 8 torpedoes were issued to Great Britain to use
with 50 old-type U.S. destroyers turned over to England under the lend-lease
act.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 256.3 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 2600 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Flask Air Pressure | 2800 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 8 Mod 4 466 pounds TNT |
Exploder | Mk 3 Mod 2 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 36 |
Range | 16,000 yards |
|
75
Bliss-Leavitt Torpedo Mk 9 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1915
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1915-1945 |
Developed around 1915 by the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., and the
E.W. Bliss Co., Brooklyn, N.Y., Torpedo Mk 9 was designed for use by
battleships. Prior to issue, however, use of torpedoes on battleships was
discontinued and Mk 9 torpedoes were placed in reserve (storage). Modified
for use in R- and S-class submarines, this antisurface ship torpedo was used
in early World War II to supplement the initial supply of Torpedoes Mk 14.
Torpedo production for the U.S. Navy was terminated by the E.W. Bliss Co.
about 1920 after completion of the Mk 9 project.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 197 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 2015 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2800 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 9 210 pounds TNT |
Exploder | Mk 3 Mod 2 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 27 |
Range | 7000 yards |
|
76
Torpedo Mk 10 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1915
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1915-1945 |
Torpedo Mk 10 was developed by the E.W. Bliss Co. and the Naval Torpedo
Station, Newport, R.I., and produced in 1915 by the Torpedo Station, to be
used as a fast, short-range, antisurface ship torpedo. The Mk 10 featured the
largest payload (warhead of =500 pounds) of any torpedo developed up to that
time. Used in R- and S-class submarines after World War I, this torpedo saw
service in the early years of the second World War.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 195 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 2215 pounds |
Propulsion | Steam turbine, alcohol |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro, straight running |
Flask Air Pressure | 2500 psi |
Homing | None |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 10 Mod 3 497 pounds TNT |
Exploder | Mk 3 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 36 |
Range | 3500 yards |
|
77
Torpedo Mk 11 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1926
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1926-1945 |
Developed by Washington Navy Yard, Washington, D.C., and the Naval Torpedo
Station, Newport, R.I. the Mk 11 torpedo was a destroyer-launched, antisurface
ship torpedo which had the first three-speed setting capability (selectable
while tube loaded). The development was completed in 1926 and Torpedo Mk 11
became the first torpedo to be designed totally within the Navy (without
industry collaboration). An objective was to attain a "universal" use torpedo
(i.e., could be launched from any type of platform).
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 271 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3511 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2800 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 11 500 pounds TNT |
Exploder | Mk 3 Mod 1 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Low | 27 |
Medium | 34 |
High | 46 |
Range (yards) | |
Low | 15,000 |
Medium | 10,000 |
High | 6000 |
|
78
Torpedo Mk 12 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1928
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1928-1945 |
Similar in design to the Mk 11 torpedo (but with detail refinements),
Torpedo Mk 12 was a destroyer-launched, antisurface ship torpedo. This
torpedo had a lower high-power setting than the Mk 11 (44 versus 46 knots) to
improve reliability. The development of this torpedo by the Naval Torpedo
Station, Newport, R.I., was completed in 1928. Two hundred units were
manufactured by the Torpedo Station.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 271 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3505 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2800 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 11 500 pounds TNT |
Exploder | Mk 3 Mod 1 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Low | 27.5 |
Medium | 35.5 |
High | 44 |
Range (yards) | |
Low | 15,000 |
Medium | 10,000 |
High | 7000 |
|
79
Torpedo Mk 13 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1936
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1936-1950 |
Torpedo Mk 13 was the first torpedo designed specifically for aircraft
launching. Developed by the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I.,
approximately 17,000 of these antisurface ship torpedoes were produced during
World War II. Among the producers were the Naval Torpedo Station; Pontiac
Motor Division, Pontiac, Mich.; the Amertorp Corp., Forest Park Ill., and St.
Louis, Mo.; and the International Harvester Co. The Mk 13 torpedo saw service
during the second World War and was eventually outmoded by ASW torpedoes.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 161 inches |
Diameter | 22.5 inches |
Weight | 2216 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Flask Air Pressure | 2800 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 13 600 pounds TPX |
Exploder | Mk 8 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 33.5 knots |
Range | 6300 yards |
|
80
Torpedo Mk 14 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1931
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1938 |
Torpedo Mk 14, developed as a replacement for the Mk 10 torpedo had a
longer range than the Mk 10 and had a 100-pound heavier warhead charge. This
torpedo was the primary submarine-launched, antisurface ship torpedo used in
World War II until the introduction of the electric Torpedo Mk 18. Approximately 4,000,000 tons of Japanese shipping were sunk by the Mk 14 torpedo.
Originally introduced for use as mechanically-set torpedo, the Mk 14 was
modified for use with modern fire control systems (and designated Mod 5). This
torpedo is still in service use. Torpedo Mk 14 was developed by the Naval
Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I. and approximately 13,000 were produced during
the second World War by the Naval Torpedo Stations in Newport; Alexandria,
Va.; and Keyport, Wash.; and the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3209 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 16 Mod 6 643 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 6 Mod 13 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Low | 31.1 |
High | 46.3 |
Range (yards) | |
Low | 9,000 |
High | 4500 |
|
81
Torpedo Mk 15 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1938
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1938-1956 |
Developed and produced by the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I.,
Torpedo Mk 15 was designed as a replacement for the Mk 11 and Mk 12 torpedoes
in surface ship application. It was 17 inches longer and 300 pounds heavier
than its predecessors. The additional weight was due to increased payload.
Approximately 9700 Mk 15 torpedoes were produced during the period 1940
through 1944. This torpedo was the last destroyer-launched, antisurface ship
torpedo in wide service use. As part of the Fleet modernization program of
the 1950's, it was phased out of service by the removal of the quintuple-mount
torpedo tubes from destroyers. Torpedo Mk 15 was developed by the Naval
Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., and produced by the Torpedo Station and by the
Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 288 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3841 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 7 Mod 3 825 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 6 Mod 13 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Low | 26.5 |
Medium | 33.5 |
High | 45.00 |
Range (yards) | |
Low | 15,000 |
Medium | 10,000 |
High | 6000 |
|
82
Torpedo Mk 16 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1943-1975 |
In 1943, the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., and the Naval Research
Laboratory, Washington, D.C., began development of a submarine-launched,
antisurface ship torpedo designated Torpedo Mk 16. The decision to use
"Navol" (concentrated hydrogen peroxide (H2O2O)) as an oxidant came as a
result of research on chemical torpedoes which began in 1915. Torpedo Mk 16,
which was also produced at the Torpedo Station in Newport, and at the Naval
Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill., had the same physical characteristics as
the Mk 14 Mod 3 torpedo. As a result of World War II, production began before
development was completed on this torpedo. None of the Mk 16 torpedoes were
used in combat, although 60 units were completed prior to the end of the war.
Production continued in post-World War II years, however, with over 1700
Torpedoes Mk 16 manufactured. The final version was Torpedo Mk 16 Mod 8 which
was withdrawn from service use in 1975.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 4000 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | Yes |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 16 Mod 7 746 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 9 Mod 4 Contact/Influence |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 46.2 knots |
Range | 11,000 yards |
|
83
Torpedo Mk 17 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1940
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1944-1950 |
Development on Torpedo Mk 17 began in 1940 by the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., and the Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. A long-range, high-speed torpedo, the Mk 17 was a destroyer-launched, antisurface ship weapon using "Navol" (concentrated hydrogen peroxide (H2O2O)) as an oxidant. Torpedo Mk 17 development, halted in 1941 due to pressure to produce Torpedoes Mk 13 and Mk 15 for the war effort, was resumed again in 1944. (Detailed knowledge of the Japanese type 93 "Long Lance," a 22,000-yard, 49-knot oxygen torpedo became available about this time.) As in the case of the Mk 16 torpedo, the Mk 17 went into production before development was completed. The producer was the Torpedo Station in Newport. Although there were 450 Mk 17 torpedoes completed before the end of the second World War, none were used in combat. Torpedo Mk 17 was discontinued around 1950 after seeing only limited use in post-war years. Main factors in the early demise of the Mk 17 were its contribution to destroyer topside weight, similarity to the Mk 16, and, also, the emerging role of destroyer as an antisubmarine warfare platform.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 288 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 4600 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 17 Mod 3 879.5 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 6 Mod 1 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 46 knots |
Range | 18,000 yards |
|
84
Torpedo Mk 18 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1943-1950 |
Torpedo Mk 18, a submarine-launched, antisurface ship weapon, was one of the most successful torpedoes of World War II. This torpedo, based on a captured G7e German torpedo, was widely used in the latter stages of the war. Torpedo Mk 18 was developed by the Westinghouse Electric Corp., Sharon, Pa., and the Electric Storage Battery Co., Philadelphia, Pa., and approximately 9000 were produced by Westinghouse and the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill. In 1944, 30 percent of the torpedoes fired from submarines were Mk 18 torpedoes, while in 1945, it was 65 percent. The tactical advantage of Torpedo Mk 18 was the lack of a wake. About 1,000,000 tons of Japanese shipping were sunk by the Mk 18 torpedo.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 245 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3154 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric Motor |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 18 Mod 3 575 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 8 Contact Mk 9 Contact/Influence |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 29 knots |
Range | 4,000 yards |
|
85
Torpedo Mk 19 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1942
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 19 was a follow-on development of the Mk 18 torpedo, designed
to incorporate all-electric controls in lieu of pneumatic controls. The Mk
19, an antisurface ship torpedo, which was developed by the Westinghouse
Electric Corp., Sharon, Pa., was designed to be submarine launched. The
propulsion power was supplied by a direct current, series-wound motor which
received its energy from a secondary storage battery. The gyroscope and depth
control were electrically controlled and operated; the rudders were solenoid
operated. Ten prototypes were built, but further development was cancelled in
favor of Torpedo Mk 26.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3240 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric, secondary battery |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | None |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 20 800 pounds Torpex |
Exploder | Mk 7 Contact/Influence |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 29 knots |
Range | 4000 yards |
|
86
Torpedo Mk 20 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 20 was actually the 1943 designation for the continuation of
the development of a submarine-launched, antisurface ship torpedo originally
designated Mk 2 (in 1941). The torpedo was developed by the Naval Torpedo
Station, Newport, R.I.; the Electric Storage Battery Co., Philadelphia, Pa.;
and the General Electric Co., Pittsfield, Mass. This was the second attempt
to develop a torpedo of this type. Earlier efforts (Mk 1) in post-World War I
years (1919-1931) were terminated due to unsatisfactory speed/range
performance. Torpedo Mk 20 never progressed beyond the development stage due
to the success of the Mk 18 torpedo. However, 20 units were produced by the
General Electric Co., Bridgeport, Conn., for testing.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | approx. 3100 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric motor |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 20 500 pounds TNT |
Exploder | None assigned |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 33 knots |
Range | 3500 yards |
|
87
Torpedo Mk 21 Mod 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 21 Mod 0, an antisurface ship, aircraft-launched, passive
acoustic homing torpedo was developed by the Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
Sharon, Pa. During the same time period, the Harvard Underwater Sound
Laboratory, Harvard University; and the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray
Hills, N.J., were adapting Torpedo Mk 13 for acoustic control. The Mk 21 Mod
0 torpedo successfully passed launching tests late in 1943. Because of the
increasing difficulties encountered by the developer, the Torpedo Mk 21 Mod 0
project was abandoned after only a few development models had been built.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 161 inches |
Diameter | 22.5 inches |
Weight | approx. 2300 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | Mk, Mod not available approx. 400 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 8 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 25 knots |
Range | Not specified |
|
88
Torpedo Mk 21 Mod 2 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 21 Mod 2 was a passive homing version of the Mk 13 torpedo
intended for use as a payload for the Petrel guided missile. An aircraft launched, antisurface ship weapon, it was developed as a joint effort by the
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, N.J.; the Harvard Underwater Sound
Laboratory, Harvard University; and later, the Ordnance Research Laboratory,
Pennsylvania State University. The Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill.,
produced a limited quantity (312) during 1946 through 1955. Development was
discontinued and this torpedo was not used in service to any appreciable
degree.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 161 inches |
Diameter | 22.5 inches |
Weight | 2130 pounds |
Propulsion | Steam turbine |
Enabling | None |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 21 350 pounds HBX-3 |
Exploder | Mk 8 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 33.5 knots |
Range | 6000 yards |
|
89
Torpedo Mk 22 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Developed by the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, N.J.; and
Westinghouse Electric Corp., Sharon, Pa., Torpedo Mk 22 was the World War II
development of an antisurface ship, submarine-launched torpedo. It had active
acoustic terminal homing in azimuth only, probably in an attempt to reduce
boundary (surface/bottom) capture problems. Further development on this
torpedo was discontinued after the BuOrd evaluation stage, which coincided
with the end of the second World War. The decision to continue with the
development of Torpedo Mk 35 during the post-war years was the probable cause
for the discontinuation of Mk 22 work.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3060 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Active acoustic |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Info not available 500 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 29 knots |
Range | 4000 yards |
|
90
Torpedo Mk 23 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1943-1946 |
Torpedo Mk 23 was developed to satisfy what appeared to be a valid
tactical requirement of World War II: the high-speed feature of the Mk 14
torpedo. In the early stages of the war, the low-speed feature (31 knots -
9000 yards) of the Mk 14 was rarely used. Due to the changing requirements
of the war, however, most of the 9600 Mk 23 torpedoes saw little service.
In the latter stages of the second World War, fewer targets and
better/smarter escorts/escort tactics necessitated firing from longer
ranges. The Mk 14 torpedo, with its low power and longer range, became the
preferred weapon. Much of the Mk 23 inventory was scrapped or converted to
Torpedoes Mk 14 while other units were cannibalized for spare parts. This
submarine-launched, antisurface ship torpedo was developed by the Naval
Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., and produced by the Naval Torpedo Stations
at Newport; Alexandria, Va.; and Keyport, Wash.; and by the Naval Ordnance
Plant, St. Louis, Mo.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3259 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | No |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 16 Mod 6 643 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 6 Mod 13 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 46.3 knots |
Range | 4500 yards |
|
91
Torpedo Mine Mk 24 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1942
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1942-1948 |
Called a mine for security reasons, the Mk 24 was developed as an outgrowth of work on an underwater listening device sponsored by the Naval Defense Research Committee during World War II. This torpedo, with a small warhead, was a crippling weapon designed for "mission kill" vice "platform kill." Approximately 4000 of these aircraft-launched, passive acoustic, antisubmarine torpedoes were produced and in service during World War II and subsequent years until replaced by Torpedo Mk 34. Mine Mk 24 was developed by a group of activities including Western Electric Co., Kearney, N.J.; Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, N.J.; Harvard University Underwater Sound Laboratory, Cambridge, Mass.; and General Electric Col Schenectady, N.Y. The Western Electric Co., Kearney, N.J., and General Electric Co. in Erie and Philadelphia, Pa. were the producers.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 84 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches |
Weight | 680 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric, secondary battery |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Preset circle search |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mine Mk 24 92 pounds HBX-1 |
Exploder | Mk 142 fuze Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 12 knots |
Range (search duration) | 10 minutes = 4000 yards |
|
92
Torpedo Mk 25 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Sponsored by the National Defense Research Committee, Torpedo Mk 25 was developed by Columbia University, Division of War Research, as a replacement for Torpedo Mk 13. The new torpedo was an aircraft-launched, antisurface ship weapon designed for higher speed, greater strength and more ease of manufacture than the Mk 13 torpedo. Torpedo Mk 25 had thermal propulsion, was turbine driven and obtained a speed of 40 knots and a range of 2500 yards. Twenty-five units were produced by the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill., during 1946 for test and evaluation. This torpedo was never mass-produced, however, due to the large inventory of Mk 13 torpedoes left at the end of World War II, and the changing role of Naval aircraft from a torpedo strike warfare platform to an antisubmarine warfare platform.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 161 inches |
Diameter | 22.5 inches |
Weight | 2306 pounds |
Propulsion | Alcohol turbine |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Flask Air Pressure | 2800 psi |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 25 725 pounds |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 40 knots |
Range | 2500 yards |
|
93
Torpedo Mk 26 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 26, an improved version of the Mk 28, was developed by the
Westinghouse Electric Corp. as an antisurface ship, submarine-fired weapon.
This torpedo introduced a primary (seawater) battery developed by Bell
Telephone which provided high performance. The Mk 26 torpedo was also the
first torpedo to use an explosive impulse start gyro and electric "on-off"
control for steering and depth control. Approximately 25 developmental models
were built by Westinghouse, but production was deferred in favor of the Mk 16
torpedo.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3200 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric, seawater battery |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 26 900-1000 pounds |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 40 knots |
Range | 6000 yards |
|
94
Torpedo Mk 27 Mod 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1943-1946 |
Torpedo Mk 27 Mod 0, developed by Bell Telephone Laboratories, was an
acoustically-controlled, submarine-launched, anti-escort ship weapon. Used
during the second World War, the torpedo had a single propeller driven by an
electric motor. This torpedo was essentially a Mine Mk 24 modified for
submarine launching in a 21-inch submerged torpedo tube by the addition of
wood guides on the outer cylinder shell. Approximately 1000 units were
produced by the Western Electric Corp., Kearney, N.J.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 90 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (with 21-inch guide rails |
Weight | 720 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric, secondary battery |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | Yes |
Homing | Active acoustic |
Warhead | Mk 27 Mod 0 |
Exploder | Mk 11 Mod 2 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 12 knots |
Range (search duration) | 12 minutes approx. 5000 yards |
|
95
Torpedo Mk 27 Mod 4 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1946
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1943-1960 |
Developed by the Ordnance Research Laboratory Pennsylvania State
University, Torpedo Mk 27 Mod 4 was an improved version of the Mk 27 Mod 0.
This torpedo was an anti-escort torpedo, fully compatible with electrical
setting fire control systems through the incorporation of the standard 65-pin
umbilical cable. Approximately 3000 of these torpedoes were produced by the
American Kitchens Div. of the AVCO Corp., Connersville, Ind.; and the Naval
Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill., from 1946 through 1954. In service in
submarines for about ten years, Torpedo Mk 27 Mod 4 was withdrawn from service
use in 1960 with the introduction of Torpedo Mk 37.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 125.75 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (21-inch guide rails |
Weight | 1175 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | Yes |
Homing | Yes |
Warhead | Mk 27 Mod 2 128 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 11 Mod 2 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 15.9 knots |
Range | 12 minutes/6200 yards yards |
|
96
Torpedo Mk 28 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1944-1960 |
Developed and produced late in World War II by the Westinghouse Electric
Corp., Sharon, Pa., Torpedo Mk 28 was an antisurface ship, submarine-launched,
acoustic homing torpedo with a medium explosive charge. The torpedo also
incorporated all-electric controls. Approximately 1750 torpedoes were
produced during the period from 1944 to 1952 but in-service use ceased after
the introduction of Torpedo Mk 37.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 2800 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Gyro |
Enabling | 500-2500 yards |
Homing | Passive |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 28 Mod 2 585 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 14 Mod 2 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 19.6 knots |
Range | 4000 yards/ 6 minutes |
|
97
Torpedo Mk 29 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1945
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 29 Mod 0 was an antisurface, submarine-launched, passive
acoustic torpedo. This torpedo, developed by the Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
Sharon, Pa., used the same acoustic system as Torpedo Mk 28. Torpedo Mk 29
Mod 0 differed significantly from the Mk 28 in other ways, however. The newer
torpedo was faster, operated at various depths, had an external depth setter,
and ran as either a straight or a homing torpedo. Torpedo Mk 29 Mod 1,
developed during the same time period, had two speeds, a remote-setting
variable enabler and an anticircular run device. In the Mod 1, the electric
motor on the impulse start gyro was replaced by a cartridge-start impeller
motor to obtain a longer gyro controlling time. In April 1945, the Mk 29
program was discontinued after BuOrd evaluation, due to the fiscal constraints
of the peacetime economy and planned developments.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 3200 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 28 Mod 2 550 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 14 Mod 2 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Low | 21 |
High | 28 |
Range (yards) | |
Low | 12,000 |
High | 4000 |
|
98
Torpedo Mk 30 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Optical wake sensing devices developed in Australia were the basis of
Torpedo Mk 30 development by the Naval Ordnance Laboratory, Washington, D.C.
The Mk 30 was a destroyer/submarine-launched, antisurface ship, homing torpedo
that used the wake of a target ship to operate the steering mechanism.
Torpedoes Mk 18 and Mk 14 were used as test vehicles for the detector heads
and control units of this wake following system. The test program for this
torpedo was transferred from the Naval Mine Warfare Test Station in Solomon,
Md., to the Ordnance Research Laboratory at Pennsylvania State University in
1946. Subsequently, the program was abandoned as a complete torpedo
development. It was, however, continued as a study of a system for homing
control.
99
Torpedo Mine Mk 30 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1942
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Mine Mk 30, an aircraft-launched, antisubmarine torpedo, was developed by
the Brush Development Co., Cleveland, Ohio, during 1942 and early 1943. It
was designed in parallel with and as a backup for Mine Mk 24 because, at that
time, there was apprehension about the Mine Mk 24 acoustic steering. Mine Mk
30 was unique because of its size; it was 10 inches in diameter, 98 inches
long, and weighed 265 pounds. (Fifty pounds of the total weight was the
explosive charge.) Three prototype Mines Mk 30 were manufactured and tested
in January of 1943 and satisfactory performance was indicated. No production
of Mine Mk 30 was initiated, however, because of the successful acoustic
steering of an aircraft-launched Mine Mk 24 in late 1942.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 96 inches |
Diameter | 10 inches |
Weight | 265 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 30 50 pounds |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 12 knots |
Range | 3000 yards |
|
100
Torpedo Mk 31 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 31 Mod 1, an acoustically-steered modification of the Mk 18
electric torpedo, was conceived as a readily producible interim weapon to be
used in the Pacific until an entirely new high-speed acoustic torpedo could be
developed. The Mk 31, developed by the Harvard Underwater Sound Laboratory,
and the Ordnance Research Laboratory, was a destroyer-launched, antisurface
ship torpedo. Although some units of the Mk 31 torpedo were produced by the
Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I., further development of the torpedo was
stopped after BuOrd evaluation due to the status of other development programs
(Torpedoes Mk 16 and Mk 35).
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 2800 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 31 500 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 29 knots |
Range | 4000 yards |
|
101
Torpedo Mk32 Mod2 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1950
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1950-1955 |
Torpedo Mk 32 Mod 2 was a surface ship-launched, antisubmarine torpedo
featuring active acoustic homing. An end product of World War II acoustic
homing system development, it was the first active acoustic torpedo.
Developed by a combined effort between the General Electric Co., Schenectady,
N.Y., and the Ordnance Reserach Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University, for
aircraft launching, this torpedo saw limited use in destroyers with the Mk 2
over-the-side launchers for a number of years. A few (10) torpedoes of this
type were produced by Leeds and Northrup, Philadelphia, Pa., during the second
World War and approximately 3300 in post-war years by the Philco Corp.,
Philadelphia, and the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill. Torpedo Mk 32
was withdrawn from service use with the introduction of the Mk 43 torpedo.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 83 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches 25.4-inch fins) |
Weight | 700 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Helix search |
Enabling | No |
Homing | Active |
FC Settings | Mechanical (preset) |
Warhead | Mk 32 Mod 1 107 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 Mods 4 & 11 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 12 knots |
Range | 24 minutes/ 9600 yards |
|
102
Torpedo Mk33 Mod 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1943
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 33 was a two-speed, passive acoustic homing, antisurface ship/
antisubmarine torpedo designed to be launched from a standard submarine
torpedo tube or aircraft. Developed by the Bureau of Ordnance, the General
Electric Co., and the Exide Co., this torpedo had a hydraulic steering system
and had the first cast aluminum shell. Only 30 models of the Mk 33 torpedo
were constructed and tested between 1943 and 1946. Production was
discontinued when World War II ended but Torpedo Mk 33 features were
incorporated into the Mk 35 torpedo.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 156 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 1795 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Passive acoustic |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk, Mod not available 550 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Low | 12.5 |
High | 18.5 |
Range (yards) | |
Low | 19,000 |
High | 5,000 |
|
103
Torpedo Mk34 Mod 1 (Mine Mk 44) |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1948-1958 |
Torpedo Mk 34 Mod 1 (initially designated Mine Mk 44), an improved version
of Mine Mk 24, used magnetrostrictive hydrophones in lieu of crystal
hydrophones. It also used two propulsion batteries in a parallel/series
switching arrangement which provided for longer search time/range and a shift
to higher speed during attack after acquisition. Developed by the U.S. Mine
Warfare Test Station, Solomons, Md., approximately 4050 were produced during
the period from 1948 through 1954. The main producers of this torpedo were
the American Machine and Foundry Co., Buffalo, N.Y.; the Naval Ordnance Plant,
Forest Park, Ill.; and the Naval Mine Depot, Yorktown, Va. In-service in ASW
aircraft for many years, this torpedo was withdrawn from Fleet use with the
introduction of Torpedo Mk 43.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 125 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (26.4 inches across fins) |
Weight | 1150 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Random search circles |
Enabling | No |
Homing | Passive |
FC Settings | No |
Warhead | Mk 34 Mod 1 116 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 Mod 7 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | |
Search | 11 |
Attack | 17 |
Range | 30 minutes/12,000 yards at 11 knots 6-8 minutes/3600 yards at 17 knots |
|
104
Torpedo Mk35 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1944
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1949-1960 |
Developed in 1944 by the General Electric Co., Torpedo Mk 35 was an
outgrowth of work done on Mine Mk 24, and Torpedoes Mk 32 and Mk 33. This
torpedo, intended as a "universal" torpedo (i.e., could be launched from any
type of platform), was a surface ship-launched, antisurface ship weapon
featuring deep diving and long range homing. Approximately 400 Mk 35
torpedoes were manufactured by G.E. Co., Aeronautical and Ordnance Systems
Div., Pittsfield, Mass., during the period from 1949 through 1952. After
having seen only limited service, Torpedo Mk 35 was withdrawn from Fleet use
around 1960 as a result of the introduction of Torpedo Mk 37.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 162 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 1770 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric, primary seawater battery |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro, helix search |
Homing | Active, passive acoustic; spiral search pattern |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 35 Mods 2 or 3 270 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 Mod 3 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 27 knots |
Range | 15,000 yards |
|
105
Torpedo Mk36 Mods 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1946
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
The ultimate objective of the Torpedo Mk 36 development program was the
design of an accurate, wakeless, pattern-running underwater missile having the
highest possible speed consistent with long range. Originally designed in
early 1944 under an amended Mk 20 contract, Torpedo Mk 36 was an all-electric,
submarine-launched, antisurface ship torpedo employing a motor of
approximately 350 horsepower and a seawater-type primary battery. The General
Electric Co., Pittsfield, Mass., and the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I.,
were responsible for its design. Between 1946 and 1950, further development
of the Mk 36 torpedo was discontinued due to the development of Torpedo Mk 42.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 4000 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Mechanical |
Warhead | Mk 36 800 pounds HBX-1 |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 47 knots |
Range | 7000 yards |
|
106
Torpedo Mk37 Mods 0 and 3 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1946
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1956 TO PRESENT |
Torpedo Mk 37 is a two-speed, electrically-driven, active/passive acoustic
homing torpedo. The main developers of the Mk 37 were Westinghouse Electric
Corp., Sharon, Pa.; the Harvard Underwater Sound Laboratory, Cambridge, Mass.;
and the Ordnance Research Laboratory of Pennsylvania State University.
Engineering development of Torpedo Mk 37 began in 1946 but work had started in
1942 on the Project 4 panel (an echo-ranging, Doppler-enabled, acoustic homing
system), which was incorporated into the Mk 37. The Mk 37 torpedo was
produced in quantity by the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill., and was
the standard U.S. Navy submarine-launched, antisubmarine weapon for about 20
years. All Torpedoes Mk 37 Mod 0 have been withdrawn from the Fleet,
refurbished, updated, and reissued to the Fleet as the Mod 3. Since the Mk 37
torpedo is available for foreign countries under the Military Assistance
Program, however, some countries still maintain the Mod 0 version.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 135 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (21- inch guide rails) |
Weight | 1430 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric motor |
Enabling Range | 300-95000 yards |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Active, passive, combination |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 37 Mod 0 330 pounds HBX-3 |
Exploder | Mk 19 type Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
107
Torpedo Mk37 Mods 1 and 2 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1959
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1960 TO PRESENT |
Torpedo Mk 37 (Mods 1 and 2) was a follow-on development of Torpedo Mk 37
Mod 0. This submarine-launched, antisubmarine weapon was developed by the
Naval Underwater Ordnance Station, Newport, R.I., and the Vitro Co., Silver
Springs, Md. The principal modification to the Mod 0 was the addition of a
wire guidance capability. This wire guidance feature lengthened the torpedo
by 26 inches and increased the weight by 260 pounds. In addition to the
change to the torpedo, submarine fire control systems and torpedo tubes were
also modified to provide the wire guidance capability. Torpedoes Mk 37 Mod 1,
manufactured by the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill., were refurbished
and reissued to the Fleet as Mk 37 Mod 2 torpedoes. Under the Military
Assistance Program, the Mod 1 version has been sold to foreign governments;
only the Mod 2 version is still in use by the U.S. Navy.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 161 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (21- inch guide rails) |
Weight | 1690 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric motor |
Enabling Range | 300-95000 yards |
Guidance | Gyro-wire |
Homing | Active, passive, combination |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 37 Mod 0 330 pounds HBX-3 |
Exploder | Mk 19 Mod 1 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
108
Torpedo Mk38 Mods 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
DEFERRED
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 38 was the designation given to a planned post-World War II
antisurface ship, submarine-launched, acoustic homing torpedo intended to
replace the Mk 28 torpedo. This development was postponed pending development
and evaluation of Torpedo Mk 37. With the success of the Mk 37, development
and subsequent evaluation plans for the Mk 38 were terminated.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | Info not avail- able (approx. 3000 pounds) |
Propulsion | Electric, primary battery |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | Active, passive, acoustic |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Development deferred |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 35 knots |
Range | 10,000 yards |
|
109
Torpedo Mk39 Mods 1 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1946
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1946-1956 |
Torpedo Mk 39 Mod 1, developed by the Vitro Corp., Silver Springs, Md.,
and the Ordnance Research Laboratory at Pennsylvania State University, was the
first torpedo to employ a trailing wire for mid-course guidance through the
submarine fire control system. This torpedo was actually a Torpedo Mk 27 Mod
4 converted by the Philco Corp., Philadelphia, Pa., for Fleet familiarization
and development of wire guidance techniques. The wire guidance feature was
eventually incorporated into Torpedoes Mk 37 Mod 1 and Mk 45 which were issued
for Fleet use. Because of this incorporation of wire guidance into other
torpedoes, the Mk 39 submarine-launched, antisubmarine torpedo was considered
obsolete and remaining units were scrapped.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 133 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches |
Weight | 1275 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Wire |
Enabling | Yes |
Homing | Passive |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 39 Mod 0 130 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 Mod 10 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 15.5 knots |
Range | 13,000 yards/ 26 minutes |
|
110
Torpedo Mk40 Test Vehicle |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1946
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 40 was the designation given to a proposed 1000-pound,
aircraft- or guided missile-launched, antisurface ship torpedo, with a
hydro-turbo jet or pump jet propulsion system. Work on this project confirmed
German demonstrations that multibase solid propellants may be utilized to
provide a gas supply (for short periods of time) at the pressures and
temperatures found desirable for the application in question. The Torpedo Mk
40 developed by the Naval Ordnance Test Station, Pasadena, Calif., was
discontinued due to technology limitations and to the emergence of Naval
aircraft as an ASW platform rather than as a strike warfare torpedo platform.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 105 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 1250 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine, Lithium seawater |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | Mk 40 300 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Info not available |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 80 knots |
Range | 2000 yards |
|
111
Torpedo Mk41 Mods 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1949
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Developed by the General Electric Co., Pittsfield Mass., as the
antisubmarine, aircraft-launched version of the Torpedo Mk 35, the Mk 41 Mod 0
torpedo utilized the same homing system and the same type of propulsion as the
Mk 35. The main difference between the Mk 35 and the Mk 41 was that functions
unnecessary for aircraft launch were eliminated from the Mk 41. The Mk 41 unit
was also made as compact as possible. Approximately 200 units were produced
by G.E. for evaluation but production was discontinued in favor of the Mk 43
type torpedo.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 120 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 1327 pounds |
Propulsion | Seawater battery |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Helix search |
Homing | Active, passive |
FC Settings | Preset |
Warhead | Mk 41 150 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 type Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 25 knots |
Range | 8000 yards |
|
112
Torpedo Mk42 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1949
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
The Mk 42 torpedo was intended to be a submarine-launched, pattern-running, antisurface ship torpedo. In this development, an attempt was made
to consolidate into one weapon past experience on the development of various
torpedo components. Contributing to the development were the Naval Ordnance
Test Station, Pasadena, Calif.; the Naval Ordnance Laboratory, Washington,
D.C.; the Naval Torpedo Station, Newport, R.I.; the Ordnance Research
Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University; and Stevens Institute of
Technology, Hoboken, N.J. Torpedo Mk 42 development was terminated in 1952
with the intent of developing a pattern-running mod of Torpedo Mk 16.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 246 inches |
Diameter | 21 inches |
Weight | 4000 pounds |
Propulsion | Turbine |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro, pattern running |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 42 800 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 type IRXEO Influence |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 40 knots |
Range | 20,000 yards |
|
113
Torpedo Mk43 Mod 0 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1950
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1951-1957 |
Torpedo Mk 43 Mod 0 was an aircraft-launched ASW torpedo. It was
developed and produced by the General Electric Co., Pittsfield, Mass., to
provide a lightweight, inexpensive torpedo for ASW use from fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft and airships. Approximately 500 of these torpedoes were
manufactured for evaluation purposes but were discontinued in favor of Torpedo
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 88.25 inches |
Diameter | 12.75 inches |
Weight | 370.4 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Helix search |
Homing | Active acoustic |
FC Settings | No |
Warhead | Mk 43 Mod 0 60 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 type |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 20 knots |
Range | 4300 yards |
|
114
Torpedo Mk43 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1950
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1951-1957 |
 Mod 1 |
 Mod 3 |
Torpedo Mk 43 Mods 1 and 3 were developed by Brush Development Co.,
Cleveland, Ohio, and the Naval Ordnance Test Station, Pasadena, Calif., during
the post-World War II years. This was the first lightweight, antisubmarine
torpedo capable of being launched by helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft, and
surface ships. Approximately 5000 of these torpedoes were produced by the
Brush Electronics Co., Cleveland, Ohio, and the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest
Park, Ill., from 1951 through 1959. This torpedo was withdrawn from Fleet use
after the introduction of the Mk 44 torpedo.
Mod 1 | Mod 3 |
CHARACTERISTICS |
PHYSICAL |
Length | 91.5 inches |
Diameter | 10 inches (13.4 inches across fins) |
Weight | 260 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Helix search |
Enabling | No |
Homing | Active |
FC Settings | No |
Warhead | Mk 43 Mod 1 54 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 type Mods 5 and 9 Contact |
|
PHYSICAL |
Length | 91.5 inches |
Diameter | 10 inches |
Weight | 265 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Guidance | Helix search |
Enabling | No |
Homing | Active |
FC Settings | No |
Warhead | Mk 100 54 pounds HBX |
Exploder | Mk 19 type Mod 13 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 15 knots |
Range | 9 minutes/ 4500 yards |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed | 21 knots |
Range | 6 minutes/ 4500 yards |
|
115
Torpedo Mk44 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1953
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1957-1967 |
Torpedo Mk 44 was a second-generation, lightweight ASW torpedo and the
first service torpedo with a seawater-activated battery as a power source.
This torpedo, the replacement for Torpedo Mk 43, had improvements in speed,
warhead size, acoustic homing capabilities, and prelaunch-selectable search
parameters. The Mk 44 was developed by the Naval Ordnance Test Station,
Pasadena, Calif., and the Aeronautical and Ordnance Systems Division of the
General Electric Co., Pittsfield, Mass. Production was started in 1957 at
G.E., and in succeeding years at the Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill.,
and at the American Machine and Foundry Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Torpedo Mk 44 was
used in service on U.S. destroyers and aircraft as an ASW weapon for about ten
years until it was replaced by Torpedo Mk 46. In addition to being purchased
by foreign governments under the Military Assistance Program, the Mk 44
torpedo was produced in Europe by NATO countries.
Mod 0 | Mod 1 |
CHARACTERISTICS |
PHYSICAL |
Length | 100 inches |
Diameter | 12.75 inches |
Weight | 425 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | 16-26 seconds |
Guidance | Helix search |
Homing | Active |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 101 Mod 0 75 pounds HBX-3 |
Exploder | Mk 19 type Mod 12 Contact |
|
PHYSICAL |
Length | 101.3 inches |
Diameter | 12.75 inches |
Weight | 433 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric motor |
Enabling | 16-26 seconds |
Guidance | Helix search |
Homing | Active |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 101 Mod 0 73 pounds HBX-3 |
Exploder | Mk 19 type Mod 12 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
116
Torpedo Mk45 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1957
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1958-1976 |
Torpedo Mk 45 was a submarine-launched, antisubmarine, antisurface ship
torpedo with wire guidance capabilities and a nuclear warhead. Using a
seawater-activated battery as a power source, the torpedo was capable of
high-3peed, long-range, and deep-depth operation. Developed by the Applied
Research Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash., and the
Westinghouse Electric Corp., Baltimore, Md., the Mk 45 torpedo was produced by
Westinghouse starting in 1959. This torpedo, which was restricted to U.S.
Navy use only, was phased out of service when Torpedo Mk 48 became available.
Mod 0 | Mods 1 And 2 |
CHARACTERISTICS |
PHYSICAL |
Length | 225 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (21- inch guide rails) |
Weight | 2330 pounds |
Propulsion | Electric |
Enabling | No |
Guidance | Gyro, wire |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 34 Nuclear |
Exploder | Not applicable |
|
PHYSICAL |
Length | 227 inches |
Diameter | 19 inches (21- inch guide rails) |
Weight | 2213 pounds (unflooded) |
Propulsion | Electric motor |
Enabling Range | Fixed 2050 yards |
Guidance | Gyro wire |
Homing | No |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 102 Mod 0 Nuclear |
Exploder | Not applicable |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
117
Torpedo Mk46 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1960
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1963 TO PRESENT |
Developed by the Naval Ordnance Test Station, Pasadena, Calif., and
Aerojet General, Azusa, Calif., the Mk 46 torpedo is a third-generation,
lightweight ASW weapon. It is powered by a thermal piston engine and is
capable of higher speed, longer range, better acoustic performance, and deeper
depth operation than its predecessors. (Torpedo Mk 46 Mod 0 uses a solid
propellant grain while the Mod 1 uses liquid monopropellant fuel. The Mod 1
performance in speed and range is better.) Torpedo Mk 46 production began at
Aerojet General in 1963 and in the next two years production commenced at the
Naval Ordnance Plant, Forest Park, Ill., and at Minneapolis Honeywell Inc.,
Hopkins, Minn. The Mk 46 torpedo is currently in service on U.S. Navy
destroyers and aircraft and has been purchased by foreign governments under
the Military Assistance Program. The torpedo will continue in service until
replaced by a new generation lightweight ASW torpedo.
Mod 0 | Mods 1 |
CHARACTERISTICS |
PHYSICAL |
Length | 102 inches |
Diameter | 12.75 inches |
Weight | 568 pounds (dry weight) |
Propulsion | Solid propellent/ piston engine |
Enabling | Not applicable |
Guidance | Gyro, wire |
Homing | Active or passive/ active |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 103 Mod 0 |
Exploder | Mk 20 Mod 0 |
|
PHYSICAL |
Length | 102 inches |
Diameter | 12.75 inches |
Weight | 508 pounds |
Propulsion | Otto fuel/ Piston engine |
Enabling Range | Not applicable |
Guidance | Laminar search |
Homing | Active or passive/ active |
FC Settings | Electric |
Warhead | Mk 103 Mod 0 |
Exploder | Mk 20 Mod 0 |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
118
Torpedo Mk47 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1970
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
NEVER IN SERVICE |
Torpedo Mk 47 was the designation given a proposed antisurface,
submarine-launched, high-speed torpedo. This torpedo was to have either
thermal or electric propulsion. The development program was terminated before
characteristics for the Mk 47 were fully defined due to the status of Torpedo
119
Torpedo Mk48 Mod 1 |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1965
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1971 TO PRESENT |
Torpedo Mk 48 is a long-range, high-speed, deep-depth, wire-guided,
acoustic homing weapon used for detecting and attacking surface ships and
fast, deep-diving submarines. The development of Torpedo Mk 48 Mod 0 grew out
of the Navy's in-house Research Torpedo Configuration Program in 1963.
Developed by the Applied Research Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University,
and the Westinghouse Electric Corp., Baltimore, Md. (the prime contractor),
this mod employed a turbine propulsion system. The end product of this
development was redesignated Torpedo Mk 48 Mod 2. In 1967 Gould, Inc.,
Cleveland, Ohio (the prime contractor), and the Naval Surface Warfare Center,
White Oak, Md., began developing Torpedo Mk 48 Mod 1. This version had a
substantially redesigned acoustic homing system, and a piston engine was used
for propulsion. After both the Mod 1 and Mod 2 Mk 48 torpedoes were
evaluated, the Torpedo Mk 48 Mod 1 was selected for production at Gould, Inc.,
for ultimate Fleet use.
CHARACTERISTICS
PHYSICAL |
Length | 230 inches (max.) |
Diameter | 21 inches (max.) |
Weight | 3480 pounds |
Propulsion | Positive displace- ment piston-type engine |
Enabling | Yes |
Guidance | Gyro, wire |
Homing | Active, passive, combination acoustic |
FC Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 107 |
Exploder | Mk 21 Mod 0 |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Classified |
Range (knots) | Classified |
|
120
ASROC Missile |
DEVELOPMENT DATE:
1956
APPROXIMATE IN-SERVICE DATES:
1962 TO PRESENT |
The ASROC Missile is a solid fuel, rocket-propelled ballistic missile
designed for standoff delivery from surface ships against submerged
submarines. There are two basic missile configurations: (1) a rocket-thrown
torpedo employing an acoustic homing torpedo as a payload, and (2) a
rocket-thrown depth charge. In the torpedo configuration, the missile
components are separated from the torpedo in flight and from that point, the
torpedo enters the water and functions as though it was launched from an
aircraft. The ASROC Missile is operational aboard cruisers, destroyers, and
escort ships of the U.S. Navy. This missile was developed by the Naval
Ordnance Test Station, Pasadena, Calif., and the Minneapolis Honeywell
Regulator Co., Hopkins, Minn. There are many manufacturers of the ASROC since
it is produced as individual components rather than as a complete unit. The
components are then assembled into missiles by each issuing Navy activity.
Mod 3 | Mod 4 |
CHARACTERISTICS |
PHYSICAL |
Length | 180 inches |
Diameter | |
Airframe | 13.25 inches |
Fin Span | 33.0 inches |
Weight | 949-957 pounds |
Propulsion | Solid propellent/ rocket motor |
Enabling | Not applicable |
Guidance | Ballistic |
Homing | No |
Payload | Torpedo Mk 44 |
Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 101 Mod 0 |
Exploder | Mk 19 Mod 12 Contact |
|
PHYSICAL |
Length | 177.43 inches |
Diameter | |
Airframe | 13.25 inches |
Fin Span | 33.0 inches |
Weight | 1071-1073 pounds |
Propulsion | Solid propellent/ rocket motor |
Enabling | Not applicable |
Guidance | Ballistic |
Homing | No |
Payload | Torpedo Mk 46 FC |
Settings | Electrical |
Warhead | Mk 103 Mod 0 |
Exploder | Mk 20 Mod 0 Contact |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Not Applicable |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
PERFORMANCE |
Speed (knots) | Not Applicable |
Range (yards) | Classified |
|
121
|