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Mark 27 torpedo

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Type
  
Acoustic torpedo

In service
  
1943-1946

Wars
  
World War II

Place of origin
  
United States

Used by
  
United States Navy

Designer
  
Bell Telephone Laboratories

The Mark 27 torpedo was the first of the United States Navy 19-inch (48-cm) submarine-launched torpedoes. This electrically-propelled torpedo was 125 inches (3.175 m) long and weighed 1174 pounds (534 kg). The torpedo employed a passive acoustic guidance system and was intended for both submarine and surface targets. Nicknamed "Cutie" by submarine crews, the Mark 27 entered service in 1943. The torpedo was classified as obsolete in the 1960s.

The Mark 27 was essentially a Mark 24 mine which had been modified for submarine launching in a 21-inch submerged torpedo tube by the addition of 1" wood guide studs mounted on the torpedo's outer shell.

Modifications and improvements

The Mark 27 Mod 4 torpedo was designed by the Ordnance Research Laboratory of Pennsylvania State University in 1946 as an improved version of the Mark 27 torpedo.

Fully compatible with electrical setting fire control systems through the use of the standard 65-pin umbilical cable, this weapon was in service on submarines for about ten years. It was withdrawn from service use in 1960 with the introduction of the Mark 37 torpedo.

References

Mark 27 torpedo Wikipedia