Whitehead Mark 3 torpedo

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Whitehead Mark 3 torpedo
Mark III Whitehead Torpedo fired from East Dock, Goat Island, Newport Torpedo Station, Rhode Island, 1894..jpg
Mark 3 Whitehead torpedo fired from East Dock, Goat Island, Newport Torpedo Station, Rhode Island, 1894
Type Anti-surface ship torpedo [1]
Place of origin Austria-Hungary
Service history
In service1898–1922 [1]
Used by United States Navy [2]
Production history
Designer Robert Whitehead
Designed1893 [1]
ManufacturerTorpedofabrik Whitehead & Co. [3]
E. W. Bliss Company
Specifications
Mass845 pounds [1]
Length140 inches (3.55 meters) [1]
Diameter17.7 inches (45 centimeters) [1]

Effective firing range800 yards [1]
Warheadwet guncotton [1]
Warhead weight118 pounds [1]
Detonation
mechanism
War Nose Mk 1 contact exploder [1]

Engine3-cylinder [1]
Maximum speed 26.5 knots [1]
Guidance
system
gyroscope [1]
Launch
platform
battleships and torpedo boats

The Whitehead Mark 3 torpedo was a Whitehead torpedo adopted by the United States Navy for use in an anti-surface ship role after the E. W. Bliss Company of Brooklyn, New York secured manufacturing rights in 1892. [2]

Contents

The primary difference between the Mark 3 and the previous versions of the 3.55-meter Whiteheads was the inclusion of the Obry steering gyro for azimuth control. This device reduced the maximum deviation right or left of the target from 24 to 8 yards. [4] About 100 Mark 3s were purchased from the E. W. Bliss Company; in 1913, these were redesignated Torpedo Type A. [5] They were used on submarines of the A, B, C and D classes. These were withdrawn from service use in 1922 when all torpedoes designed before the Bliss-Leavitt Mark 7 torpedo were condemned. [1]

Characteristics

Obry gyroscopic gear installed in the Mark 3; the gyroscope itself is labelled F, G and H Obry gyroscopic gear installed in Whitehead torpedoes.jpg
Obry gyroscopic gear installed in the Mark 3; the gyroscope itself is labelled F, G and H

The Mark 3 was ordinarily assembled into three sections: the warhead, the air flask and the after-body. The warhead's charge of wet guncotton weighed 118 pounds. The Mark 3 was what was known as a "cold-running" torpedo. [1] The three-cylinder engine ran on cold, compressed air which was stored in the air flask. The after-body carried the engine and the tail, which contained the propellers. [6]

The Mark 3 was launched from battleships and torpedo boats.

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 "Torpedo History: Whitehead Torpedo Mk1" . Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Artifact Spotlight: Whitehead torpedo" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 May 2013. Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  3. "Chronology: Torpedo in Word and Picture". Archived from the original on 6 April 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  4. "United States of America Torpedoes Pre-World War II" . Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  5. Silverstone, Paul (2006). The New Navy, 1883–1922. Taylor & Francis Group. pp. xxiii. ISBN   0-415-97871-8.
  6. The Whitehead Torpedo. Bureau of Ordnance, United States Navy. 1898.