21-in Fiume Torpedo

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21-in Fiume Torpedo[1]
21-in Fiume Torpedo[2]

The 21-in Fiume Torpedo was a heater torpedo built by Whitehead at Fiume, developed around 1912 but with delivery of two test torpedoes to the Royal Navy delayed by labour issues.[3]

Development and History

In 1913, two with Side Lugs were on order, but their air lever's position required H.M.S. Spiteful's 21-in tube and a "range gun" at Portland to be adapted for testing.[4]

It seems a certainty that the Royal Navy only ever received, at most, the two test specimens before the war.[Inference]

Particulars

Its particulars were fully explained in the Foreign section of ARTS 1912 and also in ARTS 1913.[5][6]

  • Length with net cutter and inertia pistol: 247.2 inches
  • Total weight: 2,800 pounds
  • Explosive charge weight: 396 pounds
  • Initial buoyancy: negative 275 pounds
  • A.V. pressure 2,130 psi
  • A.V. volume: 18.36 cubic feet
  • Total weight of air: 203.5 pounds
  • Water volume: 2,990 fluid ounces
  • Fuel: 335 fluid ounces

It could run 47 knots to 1,000 yards and 30 knots to 6,000 yards.

In comparison to the 21-in Mark II torpedo, it was shorter, carried a 35% larger warhead and had a range just 22% that of the British torpedo at S.R. and 60% of the range at L.R. setting.

Footnotes

  1. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1913. Plate 5.
  2. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1913. Plate 6.
  3. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1913. p. 12.
  4. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1913. p. 12.
  5. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1913. Plate 5, pp. 12-4.
  6. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1912. pp. 82-84.

Bibliography

See Also