The Mark 24 mine (also known as FIDO or Fido) is an air-dropped anti-submarine (ASW) acoustic torpedo developed by the United States during World War II; it was called a mine to conceal its capabilities. The torpedo entered service with the Allies in March 1943; the United States Navy (USN) used it until 1948. Approximately 4,000 were produced. Of the 340 deployed during the war, 204 were fired, sinking 37 and damaging 18 Axis submarines.

Mark 24
Mark 24 acoustic torpedo
TypeAcoustic torpedo
Place of originUnited States, Canada, United Kingdom
Service history
In service1942–1948[1]
Used by
WarsWorld War II
Production history
DesignerWestern Electric Company
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Harvard University Underwater Sound Laboratory[1]
Designed1942[1]
ManufacturerGeneral Electric Company[1]
Western Electric Company
No. built4000[2]
Specifications
Mass680 pounds (310 kg)[1]
Length84 inches (2.1 m)[1]
Diameter19 inches (48 cm)[1]

Effective firing range4,000 yards (3.7 km)
(10 minutes search duration)[1]
WarheadHBX[1]
Warhead weight92 pounds (42 kg)[1]
Detonation
mechanism
Mk 142 fuze, contact exploder[1]

EngineElectric, secondary battery[1]
Maximum speed 12 knots (22 km/h)[1]
Guidance
system
preset circle search, passive acoustic[1]
Launch
platform
Aircraft

Background

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The concept of the acoustic torpedo existed by World War I, but was impractical due to the insufficient understanding of underwater acoustics. Germany was developing electrically-driven acoustic torpedoes by 1933; the resulting G7e and G7es anti-ship torpedoes, running at a preset depth, entered service on submarines in 1943. The USN received a similar anti-ship torpedo, the Mark 28, in 1944.

ASW torpedoes must detect and respond to greater changes in depth and azimuth than anti-ship torpedoes. FIDO was designed within the additional constraint of being air-dropped.

Development

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Mark 24 mine diagram

USN studies for Fido began in late-1941. Requirements were issued to Bell Telephone Labs and Harvard Underwater Sound Lab (HUSL), with development beginning in December. The project became the Office of Scientific Research and Development's Project 61, codenamed "FIDO".

Bell and HUSL worked in parallel with complete information sharing. Western Electric was to develop a lightweight, shock resistant, 48 volt lead-acid battery capable of providing 110 amps for 15 minutes. General Electric was to design and fabricate propulsion and steering motors and to investigate an active acoustic homing system. David Taylor Model Basin was to assist with hydrodynamics and propulsion.

The guidance system used four hydrophones on the torpedo's midsection, connected to a vacuum tube-based sound processing array. A Bell proportional navigation and HUSL non-proportional steering system were demonstrated by July 1942.

The body was a modification of the Mark 13 torpedo. Length, diameter, and weight were reduced. The nose section was hemispherical for the explosive charge. The conical tail section had four stabilizing fins, and rudders and a single propeller. Fido was relatively short and "fat".

In June 1942, the USN decided to start production even though major testing remained to be done, including air-drop testing. Bell's proportional homing guidance system was selected. Testing of the pre-production prototypes continued into December 1942, and the USN received the first production models in March 1943.

The initial order of 10,000 FIDOs was later reduced to 4,000 due to the torpedo's excellent performance. Each cost $1,800.

Description

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Upon water entry, FIDO performed a circular search at a predetermined depth controlled by a bellows and pendulum system. The passive acoustic proportional homing system took over once the target's 24 kHz acoustic signal from the hydrophones exceeded a predetermined threshold. Initially the torpedoes were set to search for targets at depths of 50 feet (15 m), this was later changed to 150 feet (45 m). The circular search resumed above depths of 40 feet (12 m) to prevent attacks on surface ships.

FIDO's relatively low speed was kept secret. It could outrun submerged, but not surfaced, U-boats.

Combat history

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Two engagements in May 1943 have a claim for the first U-boat sunk by FIDO. On 14 May, a USN Catalina sank U-657[3] or U-640.[4] On 13 May, RAF Coastal Command Liberator B/86 damaged U-456;[5] the submarine sank the following day. In all, FIDO sank 37 submarines for an effectiveness of about 18%, compared with 9.5% for aircraft-launched depth charges.[2]: 37 

US Navy OEG Study No. 289, 12 August 1946 provides the following data related to the Mark 24's effectiveness:

Number of attacks in which Mark 24s were launched 264
Total number of Mark 24 torpedoes launched - all targets 340
Number of Mark 24s launched against submarines 204
Number of Mark 24 attacks on submarines by US aircraft 142
Number of Mark 24 attacks by Allied (primarily British) aircraft 62
Number of German U-boats sunk by FIDO 31
Number of German U-boats damaged by FIDO 15
Number of Japanese submarines sunk by FIDO 6
Number of Japanese submarines damaged by FIDO 3
Total number of submarines sunk by FIDO (German & Japanese) 37
Total number of submarines damaged 18

General characteristics

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  • Diameter: 19 inches (48 cm).
  • Length: 84 inches (2.13 m).
  • Weight: 680 lb (308 kg).
  • Warhead: 92 lb (41.7 kg) HBX high explosive.
  • Propulsion: 7.5 hp (5.57 kW) off-the-shelf General Electric Washing Machine electric motor driving a single propeller, powered by a 48 volt lead acid battery.
  • Speed and endurance: 12 knots (22 km/h) for 10 minutes, giving a range of about 4,000 yards (3,700 m)
  • Homing system: 4 piezoelectric hydrophones operating at 24 kHz and vacuum tube signal processing system with proportional steering.
  • Maximum drop altitude: 200 to 300 ft (60 m to 90 m)
  • Maximum aircraft launch speed: 120 knots (220 km/h).

Variants

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  • The Mark 27 torpedo (Cutie) was developed for submarine use against surface vessels. It saw service in the Pacific war from the summer of 1944. Lieutenant Commander Carter L. Bennett's Sea Owl achieved the Mark 27's first combat success, damaging a Japanese patrol vessel in the Yellow Sea in November.[6]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Torpedo History: Mark 24 mine". Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  2. ^ a b Jolie, E.W. (15 September 1978). "A Brief History of US Navy Torpedo Development". Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  3. ^ Kemp p117
  4. ^ Neistle p78
  5. ^ Kemp p116
  6. ^ Blair, Clay, Jr. Silent Victory (Bantam, 1976), p.788.

Sources

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