Whitehead torpedo | |
---|---|
Type | Anti-surface ship torpedo[1] |
Place of origin | Austria-Hungary |
Service history | |
In service | 1894–1922 (Mk1 and Mk2) 1898–1940 (Mk3) 1910–1922 (Mk5)
|
Used by | See § Operators |
Wars | Russo-Turkish War[2] Chilean Civil War of 1891[3] World War II |
Production history | |
Designer | Robert Whitehead |
Designed | 1866[4] |
Manufacturer | Stabilimento tecnico Fiumano[5] Torpedofabrik Whitehead & Co.[5] Royal Laboratories E. W. Bliss Company |
Variants | Whitehead Mk 1[6] Whitehead Mk 1B[6] Whitehead Mk 2[6] Whitehead Mk 2 Type C[6] Whitehead Mk 3 Type A[6] Whitehead Mk 5[1] |
Specifications | |
Mass | 845 lbs (Mk 1)[1] |
Length | 140 inches (360 cm) (Mk 1)[1] |
Diameter | 17.7 inches (45 cm) (Mk 1)[1] |
Effective firing range | 800 yards (730 m) (Mk 1)[1] |
Warhead | wet guncotton[1] |
Warhead weight | 118 lb (54 kg) (Mk 1)[1] |
Detonation mechanism | War Nose (Mk 1), contact[1] |
Engine | 3-cylinder reciprocating[1] |
Maximum speed | 26.5 knots (49.1 km/h) (Mk 1)[1] |
Guidance system | depth control, gyroscope[1] |
Launch platform | battleships, torpedo boats and submarines[1] |
The Whitehead torpedo was the first self-propelled or "locomotive" torpedo ever developed.[a] It was perfected in 1866 by British engineer Robert Whitehead from a rough design conceived by Giovanni Luppis of the Austro-Hungarian Navy in Fiume.[7] It was driven by a three-cylinder compressed-air engine invented, designed, and made by Peter Brotherhood. Many naval services procured the Whitehead torpedo during the 1870s, including the US Navy.[8] This early torpedo proved itself in combat during the Russo-Turkish War when, on 16 January 1878, the Ottoman ship Intibah was sunk by Russian torpedo boats carrying Whiteheads,[2] though this story has been disputed in one book.[9]
The term "torpedo" comes from the torpedo fish, which is a type of ray that delivers an electric shock to stun its prey.[4]
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