261:
51:
852:
461:
316:
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663:
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397:
144:
824:
31:
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228:. This was a charge of powder in a waterproof case, mounted to the bow of the torpedo boat below the water line on a long spar. The torpedo boat attacked by ramming her intended target, which stuck the torpedo to the target ship by means of a barb on the front of the torpedo. The torpedo boat would back away to a safe distance and detonate the torpedo, usually by means of a long cord attached to a trigger.
554:
835:
124:" (and later simply "destroyers"), initially were largely defensive, primarily meeting the torpedo boat threat with their own guns outside of the range at which battleships would be vulnerable. In time they became larger and took on more roles, including making their own torpedo attacks on valuable enemy ships as well as defending against submarines and aircraft. Later yet they were armed with
742:
after World War I limited tonnage of warships, but placed no limits on ships of under 600 tons. The French, Italian, Japanese and German Navies developed torpedo boats around that displacement, 70 to 100 m long, armed with two or three guns of around 100 mm (4 in) and torpedo launchers. For
294:
Whitehead was unable to improve the machine substantially, since the clockwork motor, attached ropes, and surface attack mode all contributed to a slow and cumbersome weapon. However, he kept considering the problem after the contract had finished, and eventually developed a tubular device, designed
264:
Whitehead torpedo's general profile: A. war-head B. air-flask. B'. immersion-chamber CC'. after-body C. engine-room DDDD. drain-holes E. shaft-tube F. steering-engine G. bevel-gear box H. depth-index I. tail K. charging and stop-valves L. locking-gear M. engine bed-plate P. primer-case R. rudder S.
105:
to counter an enemy. A swarm of expendable torpedo boats attacking en masse could overwhelm a larger ship's ability to fight them off using its large but cumbersome guns. A fleet of torpedo boats could pose a similar threat to an adversary's capital ships, albeit only in the coastal areas to which
1052:
in the South
Pacific in a number of roles in addition to the originally envisioned one of torpedo attack. PT boats performed search and rescue, reconnaissance, ferry and courier work as well as attack and smoke screening duties. They took part in fleet actions and they worked in smaller groups and
929:
In 1917 Thornycroft produced an enlarged 60-foot (18 m) overall version. This allowed a heavier payload, and now two torpedoes could be carried. A mixed warload of a single torpedo and four depth charges could also be carried, the depth charges released from individual cradles over the sides,
231:
In general, the
Confederate torpedo boats were not very successful. Their low sides made them susceptible to swamping in high seas, and even to having their boiler fires extinguished by spray from their own torpedo explosions. Torpedo misfires (too early) and duds were common. In 1864, Union Navy
1040:
By World War II torpedo boats were seriously hampered by higher fleet speeds; although they still had a speed advantage, they could only catch the larger ships by running at very high speeds over very short distances, as demonstrated in the
Channel Dash. An even greater threat was the widespread
726:
and three 6-pounder guns, with one fixed 18-in torpedo tube in the bow plus two more torpedo tubes on a revolving mount behind the two funnels. Later the bow torpedo tube was removed and two more 6-pounder guns added instead. They produced 4,200 hp (3,100 kW) from a pair of
Thornycroft
1105:
Aircraft are a major threat, making the use of boats against any fleet with air cover very risky. The low height of the radar mast makes it difficult to acquire and lock onto a target while maintaining a safe distance. As a result, fast attack craft are being replaced for use in naval combat by
1113:
Although torpedo boats have disappeared from the majority of the world's navies, they remained in use until the late 1990s and early 2000s in a few specialised areas, most notably in the Baltic. The close confines of the Baltic and ground clutter effectively negated the range benefits of early
471:
In the late 19th century, many navies started to build torpedo boats 30 to 50 metres (98 to 164 ft) in length, armed with up to three torpedo launchers and small guns. They were powered by steam engines and had a maximum speed of 20 to 30 knots (37 to 56 km/h). They were relatively
539:. By evening, the battleship rolled over and sank to the bottom of the Tsushima Straits. By war's end, torpedoes launched from warships had sunk one battleship, two armored cruisers, and two destroyers. The remaining over 80 warships would be sunk by guns, mines, scuttling, or shipwreck.
903:. These boats were expected to have a high speed, making use of the lightweight and powerful petrol engines then available. The speed of the boat when fully loaded was to be at least 30 knots (56 km/h) and sufficient fuel was to be carried to give a considerable radius of action.
351:
At the same time, the weight of armour slowed the battleships, and the huge guns needed to penetrate enemy armour fired at very slow rates. This allowed for the possibility of a small and fast ship that could attack the battleships, at a much lower cost. The introduction of the
930:
rather than a stern ramp. Speeds from 35–41 knots (40–47 mph; 65–76 km/h) were possible, depending on the various petrol engines fitted. At least two unexplained losses due to fires in port are thought to have been caused by a build-up of petrol vapour igniting.
875:
hull designs and were capable of the much higher speed of 30 to 50 knots (56 to 93 km/h) under appropriate sea conditions than displacement hulls. The boat could carry two to four torpedoes fired from simple fixed launchers and several
1057:
when large targets became scarce, many PT boats replaced two or all four of their torpedo tubes with additional guns for engaging enemy coastal supply boats and barges, isolating enemy-held islands from supply, reinforcement or evacuation.
568:
The introduction of the torpedo boat resulted in a flurry of activity in navies around the world, as smaller, quicker-firing guns were added to existing ships to ward off the new threat. In the mid-1880s there were developed
116:. In response, navies operating large ships introduced firstly batteries of small-calibre quick-firing guns on board large warships for 'anti-torpedo' defence, before developing small but seaworthy ships, mounting light
302:
The first trials were not successful as the weapon was unable to maintain a course on a steady depth. After much work, Whitehead introduced his "secret" in 1868 which overcame this. It was a mechanism consisting of a
702:. These were basically enlarged torpedo boats, with speed equal to or surpassing the torpedo boats, but were armed with heavier guns that could attack them before they were able to close on the main fleet.
472:
inexpensive and could be purchased in quantity, allowing mass attacks on fleets of larger ships. The loss of even a squadron of torpedo boats to enemy fire would be more than outweighed by the sinking of a
483:
of 1904–1905 was the first great naval war of the 20th century. It was the first practical testing of the new steel battleships, cruisers, destroyers, submarines, and torpedo boats. During the war the
510:
on 8 February 1904) during the war. The IJN deployed approximately 21 TBs during the conflict, and on 27 May 1905 the
Japanese torpedo boat destroyers and TBs launched 16 torpedoes at the battleship
1456:
789:), which were significantly larger, up to 1,700 tons, comparable to small destroyers. This class of German boats could be highly effective, as in the action in which the British cruiser
918:, who had experience in small fast boats. Engines were not proper maritime internal combustion engines (as these were in short supply) but adapted aircraft engines from firms such as
871:
generated much more power for a given weight and size than steam engines, and allowed the development of a new class of small and fast boats. These powerful engines could make use of
528:, the IJN commander, had ordered his torpedo boats to finish off the enemy flagship, already gunned into a wreck, as he prepared to pursue the remnants of the Russian battle fleet.
599:
and four 14-inch (360 mm) torpedo tubes, arranged with two fixed tubes at the bow and a set of torpedo dropping carriages on either side. Four torpedo reloads were carried.
738:. Destroyers became so much more useful, having better seaworthiness and greater capabilities than torpedo boats, that they eventually replaced most torpedo boats. However, the
1102:
that can be used at ranges between 30 and 70 km. This reduces the need for high-speed chases and gives them much more room to operate in while approaching their targets.
291:("coastsaver"), a floating weapon driven by ropes from the land that had been dismissed by the naval authorities due to the impractical steering and propulsion mechanisms.
1449:
252:, a purpose-built craft with a number of technical innovations including variable ballast for attack operations and an extensible and reloadable torpedo placement spar.
1442:
418:
to launch torpedoes; these were replaced in 1879 by a single torpedo tube in the bow. She carried also two reload torpedoes amidships. She was later renamed
444:. Managing a speed of 14.5 knots (27 km/h), she was one of the fastest boats afloat when completed. The Norwegians initially planned to arm her with a
783:, had few guns, relying almost entirely upon their torpedoes. This was found to be inadequate in combat, and the result was a "fleet torpedo boat" class (
487:
in addition to their other warships, deployed 86 torpedo boats and launched 27 torpedoes (from all warships) in three major campaigns, scoring 5 hits.
101:
and other slow and heavily armed ships by using speed, agility, and powerful torpedoes, and the overwhelming expense of building a like number of
109:
The introduction of fast torpedo boats in the late 19th century was a serious concern to the era's naval strategists, introducing the concept of
531:
Of the 16 torpedoes launched by the TBDs and TBs at the
Russian battleship, only four hit their mark, two of those hits were from torpedo boats
1122:
sides, torpedo boats remained a cheap and viable deterrent to amphibious attack. Indeed, this is still the operational model followed by the
887:
suggested that small motor boats carrying a torpedo might be capable of travelling over the protective minefields and attacking ships of the
299:("mine ship"), the first modern self-propelled torpedo, officially presented to the Austrian Imperial Naval commission on December 21, 1866.
1118:. Operating close to shore in conjunction with land based air cover and radars, and in the case of the Norwegian navy hidden bases cut into
591:
in 1885. The gunboat was armed with torpedoes and designed for hunting and destroying smaller torpedo boats. She was armed with a single
436:, ordered from Thornycroft shipbuilding company, England, in either 1872 or 1873, and built at Thornycroft's shipyard at Church Wharf in
178:
on even terms. One strategy to counter the blockade saw the development of torpedo boats, small fast boats designed to attack the larger
1491:
494:(IJN), like the Russians, often combined their torpedo boats (the smaller of which possessed only hull numbers, although the larger
217:
represented another class of torpedo boats that were also low built but had open decks and lacked the ballasting tanks found on the
577:, torpedo gunboats were equipped with torpedo tubes and an adequate gun armament, intended for hunting down smaller enemy boats.
1110:, which are able to carry radar-guided anti-aircraft missiles for self-defense, and helicopters for over-the-horizon targeting.
727:
water-tube boilers, giving them a top speed of 27 knots, giving the range and speed to travel effectively with a battle fleet.
131:
Today, the old concept of a very small, fast, and cheap surface combatant with powerful offensive weapons is taken up by the "
1481:
1352:
Campbell, Thomas, R. "Hunters of the Night: Confederate
Torpedo Boats in the War Between the States" Burd Street Press, 2001.
635:
2052:
1486:
772:
38:
610:
285:, an English engineer who was the manager of a town factory. In 1864, Luppis presented Whitehead with the plans of the
260:
2391:
1409:
1398:
1383:
1364:
1333:
1294:
1182:
603:
1123:
915:
642:
573:, the first vessel design for the explicit purpose of hunting and destroying torpedo boats. Essentially very small
511:
382:
2257:
828:
680:, which were much faster. The first ships to bear the formal designation "torpedo boat destroyer" (TBD) were the
195:
class of torpedo boats were steam powered with a partially enclosed hull. They were not true submarines but were
1563:
1428:
723:
304:
851:
50:
1020:
699:
681:
592:
655:. This marked a milestone in naval history, as it was the first time an ironclad warship had been sunk by a
199:; when ballasted, only the smokestack and few inches of the hull were above the water line. CSS Midge was a
1949:
994:
17:
2232:
2078:
1127:
1079:
1026:
624:
617:
495:
63:
82:
into battle. The first designs were steam-powered craft dedicated to ramming enemy ships with explosive
2279:
1661:
1032:
868:
839:
1434:
2174:
1843:
1719:
1618:
1608:
919:
797:
784:
676:
In the late 1890s, torpedo boats had been made obsolete by their more successful contemporaries, the
656:
652:
910:
or for laying mines. Secondary armament would have been provided by light machine guns, such as the
867:
steam torpedo boats which were larger and more heavily armed than hitherto were being used. The new
295:
to run underwater on its own, and powered by compressed air. The result was a submarine weapon, the
2252:
2242:
2169:
1812:
1670:
754:
747:
158:
saw a number of innovations in naval warfare, including an early type of torpedo boat, armed with
2042:
1848:
1558:
816:
677:
278:
174:
from abroad. The South also lacked the means to construct a naval fleet capable of taking on the
1310:
525:
120:, to accompany the fleet and counter torpedo boats. These small ships, which came to be called "
2419:
2037:
1924:
1888:
1883:
1709:
1613:
688:
596:
581:
507:
499:
491:
415:
342:
265:
steering-rod tube T. guide-stud UU. propellers V. valve-group W. war-nose Z. strengthening-band
55:
44:
1061:
The most significant military ship sunk by a torpedo boat during World War II was the cruiser
333:
were superseded by large steam powered ships with heavy gun armament and heavy armour, called
2124:
2073:
1969:
1873:
1868:
1588:
648:
484:
460:
1666:
2350:
1954:
1903:
1646:
1528:
888:
780:
744:
517:
375:
319:
183:
113:
35:
941:, when German destroyers defended a German flotilla against Royal Navy Motor torpedo craft
371:
8:
2414:
2386:
2204:
1893:
1756:
1598:
1143:
1062:
739:
360:
953:
452:
was outfitted with launch racks for the new self-propelled
Whitehead torpedoes in 1879.
2320:
2184:
2139:
2032:
1934:
1898:
1878:
1777:
1603:
1498:
1069:
971:
923:
896:
790:
731:
521:
480:
465:
307:
that caused the torpedo's hydroplanes to be adjusted so as to maintain a preset depth.
246:
233:
155:
2355:
2305:
2247:
2237:
2004:
1858:
1736:
1676:
1523:
1405:
1394:
1379:
1360:
1329:
1290:
1178:
1115:
1099:
1093:
892:
872:
705:
666:
588:
330:
132:
87:
393:. It entered service in 1876 and was armed with self-propelled Whitehead torpedoes.
315:
2340:
2274:
2227:
2209:
2159:
1989:
1853:
1797:
1792:
1787:
1694:
1550:
1508:
1503:
1131:
1045:, which could hunt down torpedo boats long before they could engage their targets.
779:
with "T"-prefixed hull numbers. The classes designed in the mid-1930s, such as the
761:
712:
430:
401:
334:
282:
117:
2264:
2194:
2119:
2017:
1751:
1731:
1699:
1656:
1623:
1568:
1513:
1375:
1042:
570:
562:
270:
163:
128:
and eventually became the predominant type of surface warship in the modern era.
125:
110:
59:
2134:
2129:
2114:
1984:
1746:
1583:
1098:
Boats similar to torpedo boats are still in use, but are armed with long-range
167:
2408:
2370:
2365:
2330:
2315:
2269:
2179:
2164:
2022:
1964:
1959:
1863:
1741:
1726:
1714:
1704:
1593:
1573:
1068:
which was attacked by two
Italian torpedo boats (M.S. 16 and M.S. 22) during
998:
959:
in 1918. During the civil war in Russia, British torpedo boats made raids on
884:
240:
102:
859:
were considerably larger than most
British and American motor torpedo boats.
2325:
2310:
2149:
2144:
2083:
2027:
1827:
1822:
1628:
1153:
1012:
975:
967:
938:
907:
473:
445:
441:
225:
211:
179:
159:
83:
2360:
2199:
2098:
1974:
1929:
1651:
1148:
1054:
991:
987:
877:
864:
719:
338:
269:
A prototype self-propelled torpedo was created by a commission placed by
1817:
933:
2345:
2154:
2088:
1638:
1538:
1465:
1464:
695:
631:
396:
390:
287:
175:
98:
75:
506:) and launched over 270 torpedoes (counting the opening engagement at
2219:
2093:
1908:
1802:
1782:
960:
911:
900:
735:
548:
204:
190:
121:
1048:
During World War II United States naval forces employed fast wooden
811:
764:. After World War II they were eventually subsumed into the revived
662:
359:
The first warship of any kind to carry self-propelled torpedoes was
356:
provided a weapon that could cripple, or even sink, any battleship.
236:
fitted a steam launch with a spar torpedo to attack the Confederate
143:
2335:
2068:
1939:
1578:
1533:
1172:
1107:
1049:
946:
765:
437:
386:
237:
171:
1072:
on 13 August 1942. It seems that the torpedo that mortally struck
753:
destroyers were in fact of a torpedo boat size, while the Italian
2289:
2189:
2047:
1944:
1807:
1686:
1469:
1001:
844:
823:
574:
353:
94:
79:
30:
2284:
2012:
1979:
1423:
1391:
Russo-Japanese Naval War 1904–1905, Vol. 2, Battle of Tsushima.
983:
856:
274:
1037:
and several smaller ships as they passed through the Channel.
27:
Small, fast naval ship designed to carry torpedoes into battle
1772:
1119:
834:
553:
906:
They were to be armed in a variety of ways, with torpedoes,
602:
A number of torpedo gunboat classes followed, including the
1359:
United States Naval Institute, Annapolis, Maryland; 1977.
1404:
Preston, Antony. "Destroyer", Bison Books (London) 1977.
1323:
883:
During the First World War, three junior officers of the
796:
was sunk off Brittany by a torpedo salvo launched by the
963:
harbour damaging two battleships and sinking a cruiser.
426:, launched in 1878 though she had been ordered in 1875.
106:
their small size and limited fuel load restricted them.
86:. Later evolutions launched variants of self-propelled
1084:
Franco Mezzadra) from a distance of about 600 meters.
895:
produced a Staff Requirement requesting designs for a
1393:
Published by Stratus s.c., 2010. Sandomierz, Poland.
1260:
634:during the 1880s and the 1890s. In 1891, a Chilean
170:, which crippled the South's efforts to obtain war
1357:Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869–1945.
945:Italian torpedo boats sank the Austrian-Hungarian
429:Another early such ship was the Norwegian warship
1175:Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905
464:Chilean torpedo boats in ValparaĂso, used during
337:. Ultimately this line of development led to the
2406:
1374:Chatham Publishing, 1 & 2 Faulkner's Alley,
1053:singly to harry enemy supply lines. Late in the
672:the first modern destroyer, commissioned in 1894
1245:
698:, ordered from Yarrows in 1892 by Rear Admiral
341:class of all-big-gun battleship, starting with
325:, the first modern torpedo boat, built in 1876
224:The Confederate torpedo boats were armed with
1450:
1077:
641:torpedo gunboat managed to sink the ironclad
422:. The French Navy followed suit in 1878 with
1173:Chesneau, Roger and Eugène Kolesnik (1979).
819:sank a Russian cruiser in Kronstadt harbour.
97:craft created to counter both the threat of
1011:A classic fast torpedo boat action was the
1457:
1443:
1087:
542:
502:(TBDs) (often simply referring to them as
1241:
1239:
926:. A total of 39 such vessels were built.
255:
1019:and destroyers defended the flotilla of
932:
850:
833:
822:
810:
661:
552:
459:
395:
314:
259:
245:. Also the same year the Union launched
142:
49:
29:
1311:"WW1 numbers and losses of MTB classes"
1130:torpedo boat for the protection of its
891:at anchor in their bases. In 1915, the
760:torpedo boats were closer in size to a
448:, but this may never have been fitted.
14:
2407:
1236:
1076:was launched by M.S. 22 (commanded by
806:
310:
1438:
1317:
966:Such vessels remained useful through
734:, these ships became known simply as
182:of the blockading fleet as a form of
138:
1284:
982:or "fast-boat": British termed them
593:4-inch/25-pounder breech-loading gun
34:Torpedo boats attacking the Chilean
366:of 1873. The first seagoing vessel
24:
1324:Air Commodore F. R. Banks (1978).
855:The 114-ft. diesel-powered German
25:
2431:
1416:
1177:. London: Conway Maritime Press.
329:During the mid-19th century, the
273:, an Austrian naval officer from
1422:
829:Vosper 73-ft. motor torpedo boat
455:
1378:, London, Great Britain, 1996.
1346:
1303:
1278:
74:is a relatively small and fast
1564:Anti-submarine warfare carrier
1269:
1254:
1227:
1218:
1209:
1200:
1191:
1166:
580:The first example of this was
305:hydrostatic valve and pendulum
13:
1:
1482:Naval ship classes in service
1261:Captain T.D. Manning (1961).
1159:
1015:in February 1942 when German
147:Confederate torpedo boat CSS
1950:Harbour defence motor launch
1248:The Sail and Steam Navy List
914:. The CMBs were designed by
815:Captained by Augustus Agar,
400:Another early torpedo boat,
7:
2233:Ballistic missile submarine
2079:Mine countermeasures vessel
1246:Lyon & Winfield. "10".
1137:
843:, an 80-ft. Elco U.S. Navy
803:torpedo boats T23 and T27.
722:. They were armed with one
370:to fire the self-propelled
64:Bangabandhu Military Museum
10:
2436:
2280:Submarine aircraft carrier
1662:Pre-dreadnought battleship
1472:in 19th and 20th centuries
1091:
869:internal combustion engine
773:Kriegsmarine torpedo boats
546:
277:, then a port city of the
168:blockade of Southern ports
2379:
2298:
2218:
2175:General stores issue ship
2107:
2061:
2003:
1917:
1844:Amphibious transport dock
1836:
1765:
1685:
1637:
1619:Merchant aircraft carrier
1609:Interdiction Assault Ship
1549:
1477:
1008:) were all of this type.
653:Chilean Civil War of 1891
2253:Deep-submergence vehicle
2243:Cruise missile submarine
2170:Fast combat support ship
1813:Guided-missile destroyer
1671:Standard-type battleship
657:self-propelled torpedoes
381:. The boat was built by
1849:Amphibious warfare ship
1559:Amphibious assault ship
1355:Jentschura, Hansgeorg.
1328:. Airlife. p. 29.
1088:Fast attack craft today
937:Admiralty Chart of the
827:A British World War II
678:torpedo boat destroyers
543:Torpedo boat destroyers
500:torpedo boat destroyers
498:were named) with their
279:Austro-Hungarian Empire
122:torpedo boat destroyers
1925:Armed boarding steamer
1889:Landing Ship Logistics
1884:Landing ship, infantry
1710:Guided missile cruiser
1614:Light aircraft carrier
1078:
942:
860:
848:
831:
820:
673:
647:with a torpedo at the
565:
508:Port Arthur naval base
492:Imperial Japanese Navy
468:
407:
326:
266:
256:Self-propelled torpedo
151:
67:
56:P 4-class torpedo boat
47:
45:1891 Chilean Civil War
2125:Auxiliary repair dock
2074:Destroyer minesweeper
1970:Ocean boarding vessel
1874:Landing Craft Support
1869:Landing craft carrier
1589:Fighter catapult ship
1372:The First Destroyers.
1263:The British Destroyer
1132:coastal and estuarial
936:
854:
837:
826:
814:
665:
649:battle of Caldera Bay
556:
485:Imperial Russian Navy
463:
410:As originally built,
399:
318:
263:
203:-class torpedo boat.
162:. In 1861, President
146:
53:
33:
2351:Littoral combat ship
1904:Landing Ship Vehicle
1647:Coastal defence ship
1431:at Wikimedia Commons
1287:The First Destroyers
1285:Lyon, David (1996).
1215:Olender pp. 235, 236
889:Imperial German Navy
781:Torpedo boat type 35
745:Royal Norwegian Navy
694:of two ships of the
630:– all built for the
561:, an early model of
518:Zinovy Rozhestvensky
184:asymmetrical warfare
36:central battery ship
2205:Replenishment oiler
2108:Command and support
1894:Landing Ship Medium
1757:Unprotected cruiser
1599:Flight deck cruiser
1289:. Caxton Editions.
1206:Olender pp. 249–251
1144:Torpedo boat tender
1080:Tenente di vascello
972:Motor Torpedo Boats
970:. The Royal Navy's
899:for service in the
807:Motor torpedo craft
740:London Naval Treaty
718:were both built by
520:'s flagship at the
385:at Church Wharf in
311:First torpedo boats
166:instituted a naval
88:Whitehead torpedoes
62:. Preserved at the
2321:Breastwork monitor
2185:Joint support ship
2140:Combat stores ship
1935:Coastal motor boat
1899:Landing Ship, Tank
1879:Landing Ship Heavy
1778:Convoy rescue ship
1604:Helicopter carrier
1100:anti-ship missiles
1070:Operation Pedestal
943:
897:Coastal Motor Boat
861:
849:
832:
821:
786:Flottentorpedoboot
732:Russo-Japanese War
674:
566:
522:battle of Tsushima
481:Russo-Japanese War
469:
466:War of the Pacific
420:Torpedo Boat No. 1
408:
327:
267:
234:William B. Cushing
156:American Civil War
152:
139:Spar torpedo boats
114:asymmetric warfare
78:designed to carry
68:
48:
40:Almirante Cochrane
2402:
2401:
2306:Armed merchantman
2248:Cruiser submarine
2238:Coastal submarine
2005:Fast attack craft
1859:Dock landing ship
1737:Protected cruiser
1720:Pocket battleship
1677:Treaty battleship
1667:Super-dreadnought
1551:Aircraft carriers
1499:Operational zones
1427:Media related to
1250:. pp. 82–83.
1094:Fast attack craft
687:of two ships and
597:3-pounder QF guns
589:Nathaniel Barnaby
372:Whitehead torpedo
331:ships of the line
133:fast attack craft
118:quick-firing guns
16:(Redirected from
2427:
2341:Floating battery
2275:Midget submarine
2228:Attack submarine
2210:Submarine tender
2160:Destroyer tender
1990:Submarine chaser
1854:Attack transport
1798:Escort destroyer
1793:Destroyer leader
1788:Destroyer escort
1695:Aircraft cruiser
1509:Green-water navy
1504:Brown-water navy
1459:
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1389:Olender, Piotr.
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768:classification.
762:destroyer escort
571:torpedo gunboats
383:John Thornycroft
283:Robert Whitehead
197:semi-submersible
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1514:Blue-water navy
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1376:Cowcross Street
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637:Almirante Lynch
563:torpedo gunboat
551:
545:
526:TĹŤgĹŤ HeihachirĹŤ
496:1st class boats
458:
424:Torpilleur No 1
313:
271:Giovanni Luppis
258:
164:Abraham Lincoln
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126:guided missiles
60:Bangladesh Navy
54:Decommissioned
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1417:External links
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1233:Olender p. 234
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1197:Olender p. 233
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1128:Type 025-class
1092:Main article:
1089:
1086:
1006:Patrol Torpedo
1004:(standing for
808:
805:
724:12-pounder gun
587:, designed by
547:Main article:
544:
541:
457:
454:
312:
309:
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249:Spuyten Duyvil
226:spar torpedoes
160:spar torpedoes
140:
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84:spar torpedoes
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2299:Miscellaneous
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2270:Human torpedo
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1429:Torpedo boats
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1384:1-55750-271-4
1381:
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1370:Lyon, David.
1369:
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1365:0-87021-893-X
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1335:0-9504543-9-7
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1275:Lyon pp. 8–9.
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2062:Mine warfare
2028:Missile boat
1995:Torpedo boat
1994:
1955:Motor launch
1918:Patrol craft
1823:Radar picket
1629:Supercarrier
1390:
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1356:
1347:Bibliography
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1124:Chinese Navy
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1013:Channel Dash
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990:. and M.S.,
979:
976:Kriegsmarine
968:World War II
965:
956:Szent István
955:
948:
944:
939:Channel Dash
928:
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882:
878:machine guns
862:
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748:
729:
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689:
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612:Sharpshooter
611:
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489:
478:
474:capital ship
470:
449:
446:spar torpedo
442:River Thames
432:
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416:drop collars
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72:torpedo boat
71:
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39:
18:Torpedo-boat
2361:Mother ship
2200:Repair ship
2099:Minesweeper
1975:Patrol boat
1930:Armed yacht
1652:Dreadnought
1639:Battleships
1466:Naval ships
1149:Torpedo ram
1055:Pacific War
1041:arrival of
1034:Prinz Eugen
1022:Scharnhorst
992:Soviet Navy
980:Schnellboot
978:'S-Boote' (
916:Thornycroft
865:World War I
777:Torpedoboot
720:Thornycroft
651:during the
605:Grasshopper
584:Rattlesnake
431:HNoMS
402:HNoMS
345:Dreadnought
339:dreadnought
297:Minenschiff
232:Lieutenant
99:battleships
93:These were
43:during the
2415:Ship types
2409:Categories
2387:Ship types
2346:Guard ship
2220:Submarines
2155:Depot ship
2089:Minehunter
1160:References
1074:Manchester
1065:Manchester
736:destroyers
730:After the
696:Royal Navy
632:Royal Navy
524:. Admiral
516:, Admiral
504:destroyers
391:Royal Navy
288:Salvacoste
176:Union Navy
76:naval ship
2094:Minelayer
1909:Troopship
1837:Transport
1803:Escorteur
1783:Destroyer
1524:Broadside
1492:auxiliary
1487:submarine
1126:with its
1108:corvettes
1063:HMS
1028:Gneisenau
961:Kronstadt
954:SMS
947:SMS
912:Lewis gun
901:North Sea
893:Admiralty
817:CMB No. 4
793:Charybdis
791:HMS
713:HMS
706:HMS
667:HMS
582:HMS
549:Destroyer
412:Lightning
378:Lightning
376:HMS
343:HMS
335:ironclads
322:Lightning
320:HMS
247:USS
242:Albemarle
212:CSS
80:torpedoes
2336:Flagship
2069:Danlayer
1940:Corvette
1818:KaibĹŤkan
1687:Cruisers
1579:CAM ship
1534:Casemate
1470:warships
1138:See also
1134:waters.
1050:PT boats
1002:PT boats
974:(MTBs),
766:corvette
749:Sleipner
623:and the
575:cruisers
438:Chiswick
414:had two
389:for the
387:Chiswick
368:designed
363:Vesuvius
238:ironclad
214:Scorpion
172:materiel
111:tactical
2380:Related
2356:Monitor
2290:Wet sub
2135:Collier
2053:Shin'yĹŤ
2048:PT boat
1945:Gunboat
1808:Frigate
1539:Turrets
1106:larger
1017:E-boats
984:E-boats
920:Sunbeam
873:planing
863:Before
857:E-boats
845:PT boat
440:on the
354:torpedo
95:inshore
58:of the
2285:U-boat
2013:E-boat
1980:Q-ship
1766:Escort
1408:
1397:
1382:
1363:
1332:
1293:
1181:
924:Napier
840:PT-105
801:-class
799:Elbing
758:-class
751:-class
708:Daring
690:Havock
683:Daring
669:Havock
616:, the
609:, the
595:, six
559:Spider
281:, and
275:Rijeka
1828:Sloop
1773:Aviso
1120:fjord
988:M.A.S
756:Spica
715:Decoy
692:class
685:class
639:class
628:class
626:Dryad
621:class
619:Alarm
614:class
607:class
219:David
207:Squib
201:David
192:David
149:David
2258:DSRV
2043:MTSM
1468:and
1406:ISBN
1395:ISBN
1380:ISBN
1361:ISBN
1330:ISBN
1291:ISBN
1179:ISBN
1116:ASMs
999:U.S.
997:and
949:Wien
922:and
771:The
711:and
557:HMS
535:and
490:The
479:The
374:was
361:HMS
210:and
205:CSS
189:The
154:The
2038:MTM
2033:MTB
2023:MGB
2018:MAS
995:G-5
537:#75
533:#72
450:Rap
433:Rap
404:Rap
221:s.
135:".
2411::
1238:^
1031:,
1025:,
880:.
659:.
476:.
348:.
186:.
90:.
70:A
1673:)
1669:(
1458:e
1451:t
1444:v
1412:.
1401:.
1386:.
1367:.
1338:.
1313:.
1299:.
1187:.
66:.
20:)
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