When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: bangalore blade torpedo for sale in georgia cheap
    • Amazon Wedding Registry

      Create or Browse a Wedding Registry

      Learn About Registry Benefits.

    • Lighting

      Explore Our Most Popular Products.

      Upgrade Your Ceiling Fan and Lights

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bangalore torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangalore_torpedo

    Four pieces of an M1A1 Bangalore torpedo: two individual pieces, and two attached together. The Bangalore torpedo was used in the British offensive on Bardia during the Western Desert Campaign, on 3 January 1941. [8] The Bangalore torpedo was later adopted by the U.S. Army during World War II, as the "M1A1 Bangalore torpedo". Bangalore ...

  3. List of Type 97 Chi-Ha variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Type_97_Chi-Ha...

    Type 97 Chi-Ha fitted with rocket launchers. First produced in 1943. A rocket would be launched with detonating cords affixed from its engine deck. The tank also had a rocket launcher at the rear MG position on the turret. It launched a Bangalore torpedo affixed to a rocket. [28] Type 97 experimental flamethrower tank number 2

  4. Type 98 50 mm mortar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_98_50_mm_mortar

    The Type 98 was able to fire at least three different types of projectiles: a finned Bangalore Torpedo and two kinds of stick bombs. The stick bombs were composed of a 48 mm (1.9 in) diameter hardwood stick that fitted into the barrel of the launcher and was reinforced with a metal cap at the bottom to withstand the stress of firing.

  5. Mark 50 torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_50_torpedo

    The Mark 50 torpedo is a U.S. Navy advanced lightweight torpedo for use against fast, deep-diving submarines. The Mk 50 can be launched from all anti-submarine 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. [1]

  6. Type 97 light weight torpedo (G-RX4) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_97_Light_Weight...

    In 1989 a new torpedo project by Japan, G-RX4, was launched to develop the necessary upgrades and start making prototypes. By 1997 the new torpedo was approved and put into service and is called the Type 97. The torpedo is now equipping the JMSDF P-1 and P-3 ASW aircraft as well as filling the Mark 32 torpedo tubes on surface ships.

  7. Mark 54 lightweight torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_54_lightweight_torpedo

    Brazilian Navy - In December 2020, the US Department of State approved for $70 million, the sale for Brazil of 22 Mk 54 lightweight torpedo conversion kits for the Mk 46 Mod 5A torpedoes already in operation in the S-70B helicopters of the Brazilian Navy, plus ancillary training, exercise and maintenance spare parts. [8] [9] Canada

  8. Type 53 torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_53_torpedo

    A 53-65K torpedo on display in the torpedo storage areas of the former Soviet aircraft carrier Minsk. Type 53 is the common name for a family of 53 cm (21 inch) torpedoes manufactured in Russia, starting with the 53-27 torpedo and continuing to the modern UGST (Fizik-1), which is being replaced by the Futlyar.

  9. Talk:Bangalore torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Bangalore_torpedo

    "It has been estimated that the modern Bangalore torpedo is effective for clearing a path through wire and mines up to 15 meters deep and 1 meter wide." That suggests a hole 15 meters into ground, 1 meter across, like a well. That sentence should be 15 meters long, not 15 meters deep.--TDKehoe 19:21, 21 November 2007 (UTC)