18-in Mark IV Torpedo (UK): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
The '''18-in R.G.F. Mark IV Torpedo''' was a British torpedo developed at the [[Royal Gun Factory]] in 1894 or 1895.{{FC}}{{ARTS1893|p. 52}} | The '''18-in R.G.F. Mark IV Torpedo''' was a British torpedo developed at the [[Royal Gun Factory]] in 1894 or 1895.{{FC}}{{ARTS1893|p. 52}} | ||
==Development and History== | |||
In 1895, they were just about to enter service. | |||
In | ===Particulars=== | ||
The final design is extensively laid out in the ''Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1895''.{{ARTS1895|pp. 30, 37-40, Plate 7}} | |||
The construction was very similar in materials to the 14-in Mark IX torpedo. | |||
* Diameter: 17.71 inches | |||
* Length: 16 feet, 7.4 inches | |||
* Weight with pistol, without air: 1,156 pounds | |||
* Metacentric height: at least .575 inches | |||
* C.G. distance from tip of shaft, no air: 114.175 inches | |||
* C.G. distance from tip of shaft, 60 pounds air: 114.35 inches | |||
* Warhead: 200 pounds wet guncotton | |||
It carried a charge of 170 pounds, 15 ounces – the same as in the [[18-in R.G.F. Mark III Torpedo|Mark III torpedo]]. | |||
It had a Brotherhood engine of 3.25x3 inches. | |||
Mean pitch of propellors was 40 inches. When charged with air, the torpedo must pass through a gauge 9 inches long and 17.725 inches internal diameter. | |||
With pistol and charged with 60 pounds of air was ballasted and adjusted to float horizontally and upright in salt water at a density of 1.026 and 60 degree temperature. In fresh water, with pistol and no air, it had a buoyancy of 31 pounds. | |||
The proof and passing tests were six runs when charged to 1,350 psi: | |||
* two runs from a submerged frame at target 800 yards distant | |||
* two runs from an A.W. tube at least four feet above the water at a target 400 yards away | |||
* one run above water at target 800 yards away | |||
* one run from submerged frame at target 800 yards away | |||
The limits of deviation permitted were: | |||
* lateral deviation from the submerged frame must be less than 12 yards either way throughout run | |||
* from A.W. tube, lateral deviation of 8 yards at 400 yards or 24 yards at 600 yards | |||
* deviation from set depth not to exceed +/- 18 inches | |||
The speeds required were: | |||
* not less than 30 knots to 600 yards and 29 knots to 800 yards in 60 degrees and warmer | |||
* not less than 29.5 knots to 600 yards and 28.5 to 800 yards in 50-60 degrees | |||
* at least 29 knots to 600 yards and 28 knots to 800 yards in water colder than 50 degrees | |||
Endurance was tested in just one torpedo in a batch of twenty, after passing the above tests: | |||
# make six short runs from above water gun 10 feet or more above water | |||
# be fired from submerged frame and pass within 14 yards of target at 800 yards | |||
# it must then "shew no signs of weakness or distortion" | |||
==Footnotes== | ==Footnotes== | ||
Line 20: | Line 58: | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
* [[14-in R.G.F. Mark IX Torpedo]], its contemporary | |||
{{CatTorpedo|18-in|UK}} | {{CatTorpedo|18-in|UK}} |
Revision as of 16:08, 25 November 2012
The 18-in R.G.F. Mark IV Torpedo was a British torpedo developed at the Royal Gun Factory in 1894 or 1895.[Fact Check][1]
Development and History
In 1895, they were just about to enter service.
Particulars
The final design is extensively laid out in the Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1895.[2]
The construction was very similar in materials to the 14-in Mark IX torpedo.
- Diameter: 17.71 inches
- Length: 16 feet, 7.4 inches
- Weight with pistol, without air: 1,156 pounds
- Metacentric height: at least .575 inches
- C.G. distance from tip of shaft, no air: 114.175 inches
- C.G. distance from tip of shaft, 60 pounds air: 114.35 inches
- Warhead: 200 pounds wet guncotton
It carried a charge of 170 pounds, 15 ounces – the same as in the Mark III torpedo.
It had a Brotherhood engine of 3.25x3 inches.
Mean pitch of propellors was 40 inches. When charged with air, the torpedo must pass through a gauge 9 inches long and 17.725 inches internal diameter.
With pistol and charged with 60 pounds of air was ballasted and adjusted to float horizontally and upright in salt water at a density of 1.026 and 60 degree temperature. In fresh water, with pistol and no air, it had a buoyancy of 31 pounds.
The proof and passing tests were six runs when charged to 1,350 psi:
- two runs from a submerged frame at target 800 yards distant
- two runs from an A.W. tube at least four feet above the water at a target 400 yards away
- one run above water at target 800 yards away
- one run from submerged frame at target 800 yards away
The limits of deviation permitted were:
- lateral deviation from the submerged frame must be less than 12 yards either way throughout run
- from A.W. tube, lateral deviation of 8 yards at 400 yards or 24 yards at 600 yards
- deviation from set depth not to exceed +/- 18 inches
The speeds required were:
- not less than 30 knots to 600 yards and 29 knots to 800 yards in 60 degrees and warmer
- not less than 29.5 knots to 600 yards and 28.5 to 800 yards in 50-60 degrees
- at least 29 knots to 600 yards and 28 knots to 800 yards in water colder than 50 degrees
Endurance was tested in just one torpedo in a batch of twenty, after passing the above tests:
- make six short runs from above water gun 10 feet or more above water
- be fired from submerged frame and pass within 14 yards of target at 800 yards
- it must then "shew no signs of weakness or distortion"
Footnotes
Bibliography
See Also
- 14-in R.G.F. Mark IX Torpedo, its contemporary