![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "rb" wrote in message ... Greg Hennessy wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 15:11:44 +0200, Rob van Riel wrote: In WWII, aircraft used torpedoes to attack ships. Since the 1980s, various anti-ship missiles are in use. However, unless I'm seriously mistaken, torpedoes went out of fashion soon after WWI. What did aircraft use to attack enemy ships in the meantime? Bombs, rockets and guns? Or was the torpedo still in use? The delivery profile required to launch an anti shipping torpedo successfully just wasnt feasible when the other side was throwing large quantities of proximity fuzed shells at you in everything from 40mm upwards. Surely the delivery profile of a dumb bomb (antiship) couldn't be that much fun either (but it was done)? It wasnt which is one of the reasons toss bombing was introduced. Keith ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "rb" wrote in message ... Greg Hennessy wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 15:11:44 +0200, Rob van Riel wrote: In WWII, aircraft used torpedoes to attack ships. Since the 1980s, various anti-ship missiles are in use. However, unless I'm seriously mistaken, torpedoes went out of fashion soon after WWI. What did aircraft use to attack enemy ships in the meantime? Bombs, rockets and guns? Or was the torpedo still in use? The delivery profile required to launch an anti shipping torpedo successfully just wasnt feasible when the other side was throwing large quantities of proximity fuzed shells at you in everything from 40mm upwards. Surely the delivery profile of a dumb bomb (antiship) couldn't be that much fun either (but it was done)? It wasnt which is one of the reasons toss bombing was introduced. Keith ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 12:05:17 +1000, rb wrote:
The delivery profile required to launch an anti shipping torpedo successfully just wasnt feasible when the other side was throwing large quantities of proximity fuzed shells at you in everything from 40mm upwards. Surely the delivery profile of a dumb bomb (antiship) couldn't be that much fun either (but it was done)? Skyhawks, Buccaneers etc would be delivering those bombs at lower altitude and 3-4 times the speed of a torpedo launch profile. greg -- Delenda est Carthago |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 15:11:44 +0200, Rob van Riel wrote:
In WWII, aircraft used torpedoes to attack ships. Since the 1980s, various anti-ship missiles are in use. However, unless I'm seriously mistaken, torpedoes went out of fashion soon after WWI. What did aircraft use to attack enemy ships in the meantime? Bombs, rockets and guns? Or was the torpedo still in use? I realise I was being a bit vague in my original post. I know that in WWII divebombers also took on ships, but there was a specialised weapon for going after ships in the form of the torpedo (relatie effectiveness not taken into account). Such specilised weapons appear to have been absent for use against surface targets for several decades. Of course, the various ASW platforms still employed torpedos for use against submarines, but that wasn't what I had on my mind. Now, before someone jumps me with the Slammer Harpoon, yes, I know that this is no longer a specialised anti surface ship weapon either, but it did start out that way, and many other anti shipping missiles exist. Thanks for the info so far. Rob |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rob van Riel wrote:
In WWII, aircraft used torpedoes to attack ships. Since the 1980s, various anti-ship missiles are in use. However, unless I'm seriously mistaken, torpedoes went out of fashion soon after WWI. What did aircraft use to attack enemy ships in the meantime? Bombs, rockets and guns? You got it in one. Or was the torpedo still in use? ASW. As I see it, the death knell aerial torpedoes was sounded by two developments. Increased A/A protection on ships, rendering the idea of having trained pilots fly long, slow approaches to a ship to drop a torpedo and thereby emulate the Bushido spirit of the Japanese Kamikaze effort, undesirable. Jet aircraft. TBD approaches were what, 200 KIAS? Even the early jets would be flying the approach at 300 KIAS. I suspect the WWII aerial torpedo wouldn't have fared to well being dropped at that speed. Meanwhile, pilots and fire control systems had gotten pretty good with bombs, rockets and guns. And the tactics for using them against ships. -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Despite repeated U. S. Navy torpedo attacks very few Japanese ships were
ever hit, much less sunk, during WW II. We lost almost entire squadrons of torpedo planes trying to hit Japanese 30 knot carriers, cruisers, destroyers, etc. with a 33 knot torpedo. Conversely the Japanese had their Long Lance torpedo, a very effective ship killer! Our Mark XIII torpedo was an unmitigated disaster in WW II, worthy of a textbook on how NOT to develop and support a wartime weapon system! There are no antiship torpedo planes in a strike carrier air wing today! Torpedoes are used in ASW however. WDA end "Rob van Riel" wrote in message news ![]() In WWII, aircraft used torpedoes to attack ships. Since the 1980s, various anti-ship missiles are in use. However, unless I'm seriously mistaken, torpedoes went out of fashion soon after WWI. What did aircraft use to attack enemy ships in the meantime? Bombs, rockets and guns? Or was the torpedo still in use? Rob |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 03:17:06 -0500, Jim Carriere
wrote: True enough. But, for example, at Midway the torpedo aircraft were shot down in droves while the dive bombers were not. Further, a diving aircraft is a MUCH more difficult target for ship's gunners than one flying straight and level. Well, the dive bombers suffered fewer losses because the Japanese fighters were at low altitude, having recently dispatched the preceding waves of torepdo bombers. I'd say in this case the dive bombers fared much better mostly because of the circumstances (luck), then tactics. True about the fighters, but if you look at the way anti-aircraft batteries were arrayed they were heavily biased toward lateral attack. I don't know of too many that had a purely vertical capability. Not being conversant in the tactics of AA gunnery I can't be certain, but maybe the defense against the dive bomber was fire from another ship close aboard in formation. Also, the torpedo aircraft of the day made their runs in the neighborhood of 120kts (IIRC). A dive bomber would be at 180 or better (IIRC). So it would be a more challenging targer. Also, at Midway the Japanese didn't have proximity fuses on the shells they shot at the aircraft (the axis pretty much never had proximity fuses). I know you didn't state otherwise, it's worth pointing out for the discussion in general. True, again. But neither did we until sometime in '43 (at least in quantity). Back to the original question, a missile designed to hit slightly above the waterline is similar to a torpedo designed to hit slightly below. Different from a bomb intended to produce topside damage or penetrate and cause internal damage. Yes, but there is third class of damage that can be quite severe, and that's the near miss with shallow detonation. Air dropped torpedos are normally too small to pack the punch severe enough to damage the keel if exploding underneath (one type of attack for a large submarine launched torpedo). I'm probably not making complete sense, but it's late ![]() I'm not sure of the warhead size in the WWII airdropped torp. Modern warheads (like the Mk46) are not all that large but are of much more powerful They are also designed to work against the deep diving sub that is already under heavy pressure. Bill Kambic |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
VOR/DME Approach Question | Chip Jones | Instrument Flight Rules | 47 | August 29th 04 05:03 AM |
The State of the Union: Lies about a Dishonest War | RobbelothE | Military Aviation | 248 | February 2nd 04 02:45 AM |
Question about Question 4488 | [email protected] | Instrument Flight Rules | 3 | October 27th 03 01:26 AM |
Special Flight Setup Question (COF) | Dudley Henriques | Simulators | 4 | October 11th 03 12:14 AM |
USS Liberty. MTB crewman has credibility. | Steve Richter | Naval Aviation | 2 | July 19th 03 06:38 PM |