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  2. Anti-torpedo bulge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-torpedo_bulge

    A schematic cross-section of a ship with anti-torpedo bulges. [nb 1] USS Texas with its starboard torpedo blister removed during ongoing repair work, showing the original hull underneath. Essentially, the bulge is a compartmentalized, below the waterline sponson isolated from the ship's internal volume. It is part air-filled, and part free ...

  3. Torpedo defence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedo_defence

    Torpedo defence includes evasive maneuvers, passive defense like torpedo belts, torpedo nets, torpedo bulges, and sonar torpedo sensors, "soft-kill" active countermeasures like sonar decoys and sonar jammers, and "hard-kill" active defenses, like anti-torpedo torpedoes similar in idea to missile defense systems. [1]

  4. Torpedo belt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedo_belt

    Armor and underwater protection of HMS King George V and Tirpitz. The outbreak of World War I increased the urgency to devise an effective torpedo defense system (TDS), thus the British Director of Naval Construction introduced the anti-torpedo bulge. Originally retrofitted to older ships, this was soon added to ships already under construction.

  5. Belt armor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belt_armor

    Armor and underwater protection of King George V and Tirpitz. Belt armor on damaged USS Oklahoma. Frequently, the main belt's armor plates were supplemented with a torpedo bulkhead spaced several meters behind the main belt, designed to maintain the ship's watertight integrity even if the main belt was penetrated. Furthermore, the outer spaces ...

  6. Net laying ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_laying_ship

    A net layer's primary function was to lay and maintain steel anti-submarine nets or anti torpedo nets. Nets could be laid around an individual ship at anchor, or harbor entrances or dry docks, or other anchorages. Net laying was potentially dangerous work, and net laying seamen were experts at dealing with blocks, tackles, knots and splicing.

  7. Torpedo bulkhead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedo_bulkhead

    A torpedo bulkhead is a type of naval armor common on the more heavily armored warships, especially battleships and battlecruisers of the early 20th century. It is designed to keep the ship afloat even if the hull is struck underneath the belt armor by a shell or by a torpedo .

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