Brennan torpedo

Brennan torpedo
Brennan torpedo replica at the Hong Kong Museum of Coastal Defence; cut-out shows the two drums of wire used for propulsion and guidance
TypeTorpedo
Service history
In service1890-1906
Used by British Army Royal Engineers
Production history
DesignerLouis Brennan
Designed1874-1877
ManufacturerBrennan Torpedo Company
Specifications
Length15 feet (4.6 m)[1]

Effective firing range2,000 yards (1,800 m)
Warhead weight200 pounds (91 kg)[2]

EngineShore-based steam winch
Maximum depth12 feet (3.7 m)
Maximum speed 27 knots (14 m/s)
Guidance
system
Wire
Launch
platform
Shore-based harbor defense installations

The Brennan torpedo was a torpedo patented by Irish-born Australian inventor Louis Brennan in 1877. It was propelled by two contra-rotating propellers that were spun by rapidly pulling out wires from drums wound inside the torpedo. Differential speed on the wires connected to the shore station allowed the torpedo to be guided to its target, up to 2,000 yards (1,800 m) away, at speeds of up to 27 knots (31 mph).

The Brennan torpedo is often claimed as the world's first guided missile, but guided torpedoes invented by John Ericsson, John Louis Lay, and Victor von Scheliha all predate it; however, Brennan's torpedo was much simpler in its concept and worked over an acceptable range at a satisfactory speed so it might be more accurate to call it the world's first practical guided missile.[3]

  1. ^ Gray, Edwyn (2004). Nineteenth Century Torpedoes and Their Inventors. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-341-1.
  2. ^ "Brief History of the Torpedo". Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  3. ^ Gray, Edwyn (2004). Nineteenth-Century Torpedoes and Their Inventors. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-341-1.