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Whitehead Mark 3 torpedo

Whitehead Mark 3 torpedo
Mark III Whitehead Torpedo fired from East Dock, Goat Island, Newport Torpedo Station, Rhode Island, 1894..jpg
Mark 3 Whitehead torpedo fired from East Dock, Goat Island, Newport Torpedo Station, Rhode Island, 1894
Type Anti-surface ship torpedo
Place of origin Austria-Hungary
Service history
In service 1898–1922
Used by  United States Navy
Production history
Designer Robert Whitehead
Designed 1893
Manufacturer Torpedofabrik Whitehead & Co.
E. W. Bliss Company
Specifications
Weight 845 pounds
Length 140 inches (3.55 meters)
Diameter 17.7 inches (45 centimeters)

Effective firing range 800 yards
Warhead wet guncotton
Warhead weight 118 pounds
Detonation
mechanism
War Nose Mk 1 contact exploder

Engine 3-cylinder
Speed 26.5 knots
Guidance
system
gyroscope
Launch
platform
battleships and torpedo boats

The Whitehead Mark 3 torpedo was a Whitehead torpedo adopted by the United States Navy for use in an anti-surface ship role after the E. W. Bliss Company of Brooklyn, New York secured manufacturing rights in 1892.

The primary difference between the Mark 3 and the previous versions of the 3.55-meter Whiteheads was the inclusion of the Obry steering gyro for azimuth control. This device reduced the maximum deviation right or left of the target from 24 to 8 yards. About 100 Mark 3s were purchased from the E. W. Bliss Company; in 1913, these were redesignated Torpedo Type A. These were withdrawn from service use in 1922 when all torpedoes designed before the Bliss-Leavitt Mark 7 torpedo were condemned.

The Mark 3 was ordinarily assembled into three sections: the warhead, the air flask and the after-body. The warhead's charge of wet guncotton weighed 118 pounds. The Mark 3 was what was known as a "cold-running" torpedo. The three-cylinder engine ran on cold, compressed air which was stored in the air flask. The after-body carried the engine and the tail, which contained the propellers.

The Mark 3 was launched from battleships and torpedo boats.


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