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61 cm Type 90 torpedo

61 cm Type 90 torpedo
Type Torpedo
Place of origin Empire of Japan
Service history
In service 1933 - 1945
Used by Imperial Japanese Navy
Wars Second World War
Production history
Designed 1928-1932
Manufacturer Kure, Yokosuka and Sasebo Naval Arsenals
Specifications
Weight 2.54 tonnes (2.50 long tons; 2.80 short tons)
Length 8.55 metres (28 ft 1 in)
Diameter 60.9 centimetres (24.0 in)

Effective firing range 7,000 metres (7,700 yd) (at 46 knots)
Maximum firing range 15,000 metres (16,000 yd) (at 35 knots)
Warhead weight 400 kg (880 lb)

Engine 2-cylinder double-action
Speed 46 knots (85 km/h)

The 61 cm Type 90 torpedo was a surface-fired torpedo used by the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II. It was used in the Hatsuharu-class destroyers and in most cruisers, including the Furutaka, Aoba, Myoko, Takao and Mogami-class heavy cruisers after refits during the 1930s. It was superseded by the Type 93 oxygen-powered torpedo, commonly called the Long Lance, as oxygen generating equipment was installed aboard the cruisers.

The torpedo was based on a newly developed British 46-knot (85 km/h) 21-inch (53 cm) Whitehead torpedo. This weapon used a new double-action two-cylinder engine rather than the four-cylinder radial engine used by World War I-era British torpedoes. It was significantly faster (8–10 knots (15–19 km/h)), although it had a much shorter range (only 10,000 metres (11,000 yd)) than the Japanese 6th and 8th Year torpedoes. Twenty of these were bought with training warheads in 1926 for ¥30,000 each; the British allowed Japanese technicians to observe the manufacturing process and launch trials. Japan bought a manufacturing license in 1928 for ¥150,000.

The Japanese did not actually manufacture any of these torpedoes, but combined their technology with the results of independent Japanese research to produce the 61 cm Type 90. Testing of the prototypes was prolonged by the need to correct a number of design errors and manufacturing defects, but two prototypes were turned over to the Underwater School in 1931 for practical use. It was informally adopted for use in 1932, but not officially accepted until 15 November 1933. Production initially began at the Kure Naval Arsenal, but the Yokosuka and Sasebo Naval Arsenals began production later.


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