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  2. Secondary armament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_armament

    Such weapons were designed to fire at both capital ship targets and smaller targets, such as torpedo craft and destroyers. Small targets were of course vulnerable to 6-inch projectiles, and a high rate of fire was necessary to be able to hit a small and evasive target. In this era, secondary weapons were also expected to engage capital ships.

  3. 61 cm Type 90 torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/61_cm_Type_90_torpedo

    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 ...

  4. Torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedo

    They are also used in conjunction with other weapons; for example, the Mark 46 torpedo used by the United States is the warhead section of the ASROC, a kind of anti-submarine missile; the CAPTOR mine (CAPsulated TORpedo) is a submerged sensor platform which releases a torpedo when a hostile contact is detected.

  5. List of destroyers of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_destroyers_of_Japan

    These twenty-three 'turtle-back' destroyers, all authorised under the Ten Year Naval Expansion Programme of 1898, comprised six Ikazuchi class built by Yarrow [4] and six Murakumo class built by Thornycroft [5] in the UK, each carrying 1 × 12-pdr (aft) and 5 x 6-pdr guns and 2 × 18 in torpedo tubes, and followed by two larger ships from each of the same builders (the Shirakumo class from ...

  6. Japanese 45 cm torpedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_45_cm_torpedo

    The torpedo propeller would freewheel while the weapon was airborne, functioning like a stabilizer. A total of 880 units were manufactured before the end of the war. Early prototypes of what would become the Type 4, in 1942, were probably the source of the "New Kure" torpedo rumors reported by the United States Bureau of Ordnance.

  7. List of destroyer classes of the United States Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_destroyer_classes...

    USS Gridley, an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer The first automotive torpedo was developed in 1866, and the torpedo boat was developed soon after. In 1898, while the Spanish–American War was being fought in the Caribbean and the Pacific, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt wrote that the Spanish torpedo boat destroyers were the only threat to the American navy, and pushed for ...

  8. Torpedo cruiser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedo_cruiser

    Another new type which threatened to usurp the torpedo cruiser's role was the "torpedo-boat destroyer", soon simply known as the destroyer. The concept was influenced by the Spanish torpedo cruiser Destructor launched in 1886, but the subsequent British type pioneered in 1892 was smaller and faster, and was quickly adopted by all the great ...

  9. HMS Lightning (G55) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Lightning_(G55)

    HMS Lightning was an L-class destroyer of the Royal Navy.She was launched on 22 April 1940 and sunk on 12 March 1943 by German Motor Torpedo Boat S-55. [1]Ordered under the 1937 Programme and laid down as Job No J4502, Hawthorn Leslie & Co of Newcastle Upon Tyne were awarded the contract to build her with machinery supplied by Parsons.