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anti-ship weapons question



 
 
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  #2  
Old April 13th 05, 02:52 PM
Keith W
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"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.


The simple fact is that flying up close to a ship
equipped with radar directed AA guns firing proximity
fused shells was no longer a viable proposition


What did aircraft use to
attack enemy ships in the meantime? Bombs, rockets and guns? Or was the
torpedo still in use?


Torpedoes are still used by submarines of course but stand off
techniques like toss bombing along with rockets were first used
during late WW2. Coastal command aircraft used Rocket Projectiles
quite succesfully against German shipping for example.

In the early 60's the use of guided bombs like Walleye and
early guided missiles like Bullpup began in earnest.

Keith





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  #3  
Old April 13th 05, 03:51 PM
Ed Rasimus
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 14:52:20 +0100, "Keith W"
wrote:

Torpedoes are still used by submarines of course but stand off
techniques like toss bombing along with rockets were first used
during late WW2. Coastal command aircraft used Rocket Projectiles
quite succesfully against German shipping for example.

In the early 60's the use of guided bombs like Walleye and
early guided missiles like Bullpup began in earnest.


Dunno where you were in the early '60s, but Walleye didn't come into
the inventory into quite late in the '60s and even then wasn't used in
any great numbers. Attempts in SEA were minimal and the results from
first generation LGBs were offering much better results.

Bullpup B was deployed in large numbers but the small warhead made it
a poor choice for ships (along with the highly vulnerable delivery
profile). The AGM-12C version had a bigger warhead, but still demanded
a long, straight, post-release flight by the delivery aircraft to
successfully guide the weapon. Still minimal size for a warship.

I was doing TASMO tactical development during the mid '70s with the
F-4 out of Torrejon Spain. (TASMO=Tactical Air Support of Maritime
Operations, i.e. attack by land-based air of naval vessels--a NATO
term). We would have liked third-generation LGB, but only the F-111Fs
out of England had that, so we primarily planned with the available
bombs which were the Mk-8x series of GP low drags.

Concept was strictly roll-back with packages on average of 12
aircraft, usually with chaff support, doing low altitude ingress to
pop-ups on the first combatant encountered. Pk ranged in the
neighborhood of .8 for these with a seaworthiness kill (stop the
vessel manuvering potential).

Defensive packages from the CVBG included Terrior, Talos, Tartan and
close in Phalanx and Sea Sparrow. It wouldn't have been a fun mission
for real.


Ed Rasimus
Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret)
"When Thunder Rolled"
www.thunderchief.org
www.thundertales.blogspot.com
  #4  
Old April 13th 05, 08:31 PM
Keith W
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"Ed Rasimus" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 14:52:20 +0100, "Keith W"
wrote:

Torpedoes are still used by submarines of course but stand off
techniques like toss bombing along with rockets were first used
during late WW2. Coastal command aircraft used Rocket Projectiles
quite succesfully against German shipping for example.

In the early 60's the use of guided bombs like Walleye and
early guided missiles like Bullpup began in earnest.


Dunno where you were in the early '60s, but Walleye didn't come into
the inventory into quite late in the '60s and even then wasn't used in
any great numbers. Attempts in SEA were minimal and the results from
first generation LGBs were offering much better results.


First drop by the USN was from an A-4 at Naval Ordnance Test Station,
China Lake in January 1963 but of course your right it was 1968
before they came into the inventory in any numbers.

Keith


  #5  
Old April 14th 05, 04:51 AM
mark johnston
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"Keith W" wrote in message
...

"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.


The simple fact is that flying up close to a ship
equipped with radar directed AA guns firing proximity
fused shells was no longer a viable proposition


[snip]

I recently read in one of the Aerospace trade journals that the Navy is
considering equipping torpedoes with wing kits and precision guidance kits
for stand-off use. Wasn't clear if this is intended for ASW or against
surface ships as well.

Mark


  #6  
Old April 13th 05, 09:39 PM
Gord Beaman
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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?

Rob

Certainly was for submarines from aircraft...I finished flying
ASW aircraft in 1977 and they were still equipped for and trained
to use torps past that time.
--

-Gord.
(use gordon in email)
  #7  
Old April 14th 05, 10:46 AM
Rob van Riel
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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
  #8  
Old April 14th 05, 05:00 PM
Ogden Johnson III
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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.]
  #9  
Old April 14th 05, 08:56 PM
W. D. Allen Sr.
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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



 




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