Mark 50 torpedo

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Mark 50 Advanced Lightweight Torpedo

Mark 50 torpedo being fired
Type Torpedo
Place of origin United States of America
Service history
Used by United States Navy
Production history
Designer Honeywell
Designed 1974
Manufacturer Alliant Techsystems
Produced 1991-
Specifications
Weight 750 lb (340 kg)
Length 112 in (2.84 m)
Width 12.75 in (2.84 m)

Warhead HE shaped charge
Warhead weight 100 lb (45 kg)

Engine Stored Chemical Energy Propulsion System
Operational
range
Classified
Speed 40+ knots (74+ km/h)
Guidance
system
Active/passive acoustic homing

The Mark 50 torpedo is a U.S. Navy advanced lightweight torpedo for use against the faster, deeper-diving and more sophisticated submarines. The Mk-50 can be launched from all ASW aircraft, and from torpedo tubes aboard surface combatant ships. The Mk-50 was intended to replace the Mk-46 as the fleet's lightweight torpedo. Instead it will be replaced with the Mark 54 LHT.

The torpedo's Stored Chemical Energy Propulsion System (SCEPS) uses a small tank of sulfur hexafluoride gas which is sprayed over a block of solid lithium, which generates enormous quantities of heat, in turn used to generate steam from seawater. The steam propels the torpedo in a closed Rankine cycle.

[edit] General characteristics, Mk-50

  • Primary function: air and ship-launched lightweight torpedo
  • Contractor: Alliant Techsystems, Westinghouse
  • Length: 2.84 m (112 in)
  • Weight: 340 kg (750 lb)
  • Diameter: 324 mm (12.75 in)
  • Speed: > 40 kn (46 mi/h, 74 km/h)
  • Power Plant: Stored Chemical Energy Propulsion System
  • Guidance system: Active/passive acoustic homing
Mark 50 propulsor.
Mark 50 propulsor.
  • Warhead: approximately 45 kg (100 lb) high explosive (shaped charge)

[edit] References

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