Anti-submarine mortar

Anti-submarine mortar

Anti-submarine mortars are artillery pieces deployed on ships for the purpose of sinking submarines by a direct hit with a small explosive charge. They are often larger versions of the mortar used by infantry and fire a projectile in relatively the same manner. They were created in WWII as a development of the depth charge and works on the same principle.

Beginnings

Anti-submarine warfare did not become an issue of great concern until WWI, when Germany used submarines in an attempt to strangle British shipping in the Atlantic Ocean and elsewhere. The earliest way to counter a submarine was in the form of depth charges, which were large canisters filled with explosives, rolled off the back of a ship and detonated by a hydrostatic fuse. Depth charges served well throughout WWI but were not without flaws. A ship had to pass directly over a submarine to score an effective hit, because of this depth charges were dropped in lines instead of more effective clusters and could only be carried in ships fast enough to avoid the concussion of the explosion. The depth charges were also not as effective as one might think at sinking a submarine - only a very close detonation would sink a submarine, and the problems of scoring a direct hit meant that a submarine was more often damaged then destroyed by depth charges.

Early Anti-Submarine Mortars

After WWI depth charge throwers were developed, which could hurl depth charges some convert|100|ft|m off the side of a ship. These were a significant improvement over the old method, but still required a ship to pass very close to a submarine. Later in the war more effective systems, and the first Anti-submarine mortars, were developed. The first was the famous "Hedgehog", which consisted of 24 small mortar rounds, each one convert|7|in|mm in diameter and weighing 65 pounds with a 35-pound warhead. Each projectile had a range of about convert|250|yd and was fired in a circular pattern in front of a ship. While the warhead on a hedgehog was much smaller than that of a depth charge it scored 3 times as many kills then its predecessors. This was due to the use of a contact fuse on the projectile, which would only detonate on impact with a target. Since the projectile would only explode on a hit the long periods of sonar "blackout" were eliminated. The fact that the Hedgehog could be fired in front of a ship meant that it did not have to pass directly over the target.

Modern Uses

The homing torpedo has largely replaced the anti-submarine mortar in naval combat, although several examples still exist. The British Limbo system, with three gyro-stabilized barrels, fires 350-pound projectiles to a range of convert|1000|yd. It remained in service with many British and Commonwealth navies until the 1980s. The Bofors anti-submarine mortar, which uses a rocket motor in place of an explosive charge, is still in use with the Swedish Navy. Due to the poor sonar conditions of the Baltic sea the mortar still retains a place next to torpedoes. It has two or four barrels and fires a 550-pound projectile up to convert|3800|yd. The former Soviet Navy (and by extension, the Russian Navy) is the largest user of anti-submarine mortars. Keeping with the Soviet idea that weapons should be simple and cheap, several versions of rocket-propelled anti-submarine mortars were developed. There were also conducted trials of destroying oncoming torpedoes with anti-submarine mortars. The most common is the RBU-6000, which fires 12 160-pound projectiles in a horseshoe pattern up to convert|6500|yd away. There was also a more extreme version, the nuclear SUW-N-1, though this is more technically an anti-submarine rocket. It had anti-surface and land-attack uses as well.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Anti-submarine weapon — An anti submarine weapon is any one of a range of devices that are intended to act against a submarine, and its crew, to destroy (sink) the vessel or to destroy or reduce its capability as a weapon of war. An anti submarine weapon can be… …   Wikipedia

  • Mortar (weapon) — Part of the series on Cannon His …   Wikipedia

  • Anti-Invasion Floating Mortar — Also known as Naysmyth s Submarine Mortar and the Steam Ram, the Anti Invasion Floating Hammer was a semi submersible naval ship conceived and published by inventor James Nasmyth in 1853. [Smiles, Samuel, ed., James Nasmyth Engineer: An… …   Wikipedia

  • Haiqing class submarine chaser — Unlike western navies, the People s Liberation Army Navy does not have dedicated patrol boats / craft in its inventory, instead, a variety of naval vessels ranged from minesweepers to fast attack craft are deployed for patrol duties. 20 Haiqing… …   Wikipedia

  • German submarine U-309 — Unterseeboot 309 (usually abbreviated to U 309) was a German U boat built during World War II. She saw service in the Atlantic Ocean, and sank the freighter SS Samneva of 7,219 tons in her eleven mostly uneventful war patrols. Built in 1942 at… …   Wikipedia

  • M30 107 mm Mortar — The M30 107 mm (4.2 inch Mortar) heavy mortar is an American rifled, muzzle loading, high angle of fire weapon used for long range indirect fire support to infantry units. DesignThe M30 system weighs 305 kg including the complete mortar with a… …   Wikipedia

  • USS Carpenter (DD-825) — following her FRAM I refit Career (USA) …   Wikipedia

  • Limbo (weapon) — Infobox Weapon name= Limbo caption= origin= UK type= anti submarine mortar is ranged= is bladed= is explosive=yes is artillery=yes is vehicle= is missile=yes is UK=yes service= 1955 ndash; 1980s used by=Royal Navy wars= Falklands War designer=… …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of the Atlantic (1939–1945) — Infobox Military Conflict conflict = Battle of the Atlantic partof = World War II caption = Officers on the bridge of an escorting British destroyer keep a sharp look out for enemy submarines, October 1941 date = September 3 1939 May 7 1945 place …   Wikipedia

  • Type 82 destroyer — The Type 82 or Bristol class destroyer was to be a class of four Royal Navy warships intended as area air defence destroyers to replace the County class destroyers, and to serve as escorts to the planned CVA 01 aircraft carriers. Eventually only… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”