Mark 16 torpedo explained

Mark 16 torpedo
Origin:United States
Type:Anti-surface ship torpedo[1]
Is Ranged:yes
Is Explosive:yes
Is Missile:yes
Service:1943–1975
Used By:United States Navy
Wars:World War II
Designer:Naval Torpedo Station
Naval Research Laboratory
Manufacturer:Naval Torpedo Station
Naval Ordnance Station Forest Park
Design Date:1943
Production Date:1943 – post-World War II
Number:> 1,700
Weight:
  • 3895lb mod 0
  • 3922lb mod 1
  • 4155lb mod 8
Length:246inches
Diameter:21inches
Range:
  • 7000yd Mod 0
  • 11000yd to 12500yd Mod 1-8
Filling:
  • Mk 16, Mod 0/1, TPX
  • Mk 16 Mod 7/8, HBX
Filling Weight:1260lb on Mod 0 and 8 746lb on Mod 1
Detonation:Mk 9 Mod 4 contact/influence exploder
Engine:Turbine
Propellant:"Navol", concentrated hydrogen peroxide
Speed:46.2kn
Guidance:Gyroscope
Launch Platform:Submarines

The Mark 16 torpedo was a redesign of the United States Navy's standard Mark 14 torpedo in use during World War II. It incorporated war-tested improvements into a weapon designed to be used in unmodified United States fleet submarines. Due to high unit cost and the Mark 14's unreliability issues being solved by mid-1943, they were never put into mass production.

Following WWII, limited numbers of the weapon were produced. The weapon was considered the United States' standard anti-shipping torpedo for twenty years;[2] despite significant numbers of Mark 14 torpedoes left over from wartime production. This hydrogen peroxide propelled, 21inches torpedo was 6.25m (20.51feet) long and weighed 1800kg (4,000lb).[2]

The Mod 0 warhead contained 1260lb of Torpex (TPX) explosive and at the time was the most powerful conventional submarine torpedo warhead in the world. The TPX explosive in use by the US Navy during WWII was about 75% more powerful by weight (7,405 J/g) than the Japanese Type 95 and Type 97 torpedo explosives (4,370 J/g). As a result, it was even more powerful than the late war "Mod.3" variant of the Type 93 "Long Lance" torpedo; which used 780 kg of the Type 97 explosive, despite the warhead weighing 210 kg (28%) less.

The Mod 1 Variant of the Mk 16 only contained 960lb of TPX explosive but could run around 4,500 yards longer as a result. The torpedo could be set for both straight or patterned running. After World War II, the Mod 0 and Mod 1 variants were developed into a common torpedo. Designed to keep the longer range from Mod 1 and larger warhead of Mod 0, this upgrade was called the Mark 16 Mod 8 and incorporated a 1,260 pound HBX (7,552 J/g) warhead in the place of the TPX. This weapon was used as the US Navy's main anti-ship torpedo until it was phased out in 1972, at which point both the Mark 16 and Mark 37 ASW torpedoes had been fully replaced by the dual-purpose Mark 48 in 1975.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Torpedo History: Torpedo Mk16 . 13 June 2013 . 15 September 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140915054904/http://www.history.navy.mil/museums/keyport/html/part2.htm . dead .
  2. Kurak, September 1966, p.144