Siemens torpedo glider

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Siemens torpedo glider
Turbine
Guidance
system
Wire-guided
Launch
platform
Zeppelin Airships

The Siemens torpedo glider (often referred to as an aerial torpedo) was an early precursor of the modern glide bomb developed in World War I but never used in action. It consisted of a naval torpedo with an attached airframe which was to be remotely wire-guided.[1][2]

History

In October 1914, Dr.

Wilhelm von Siemens proposed what became was to become known as the Siemens torpedo glider, a wire-guided flying missile that would have comprised a naval torpedo with an attached airframe. It was not intended that it be flown into a target; rather, at a suitable altitude and position, a signal would have been transmitted which would cause the airframe components to detach from the torpedo which would then enter the water and continue towards its target. Guidance signals were to be transmitted through a thin copper wire unrolled from a 2.5 mi (4.0 km) reel above the fuselage, and guide flares were to be carried to help control.[3]

Siemens-Schuckertwerke was already occupied with remote-controlled anti-shipping motorboats (the FL-boats
or Fernlenkboote), and so had some experience in the field of remote control.

Flight testing was performed under the supervision of Dipl. Ing. Dorner from January 1915 onwards, using airships as carriers. Different types of biplane and monoplane airframes were tested, to which a torpedo was fitted, before a biplane layout was adopted due to its greater carrying ability. The last test flight was performed on August 2, 1918. On this flight a 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb) biplane glider was launched from Zeppelin LZ 80 (L 35).[4][5] The glider was released from 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) over the Havel river and worked as expected until its control wire that attached the glider to the Zeppelin snapped and the glider spun out of control.[4]

It was planned to use the

Armistice
stopped the project. [6]

See also

Bibliography

Notes

References

  • Branfill-Cook, Roger (2014). Torpedo: The Complete History of the World's Most Revolutionary Naval Weapon. Seaforth Publishing. . - Total pages: 256
  • . Retrieved August 3, 2020. - Total pages: 320
  • Reuter, Claus (2020). The V2 and the German, Russian and American Rocket Program. German Canadian Museum. .
  • Robinson, Anthony (1979). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aviation. Marshall Cavendish. p. 2043.
  • Sollinger, Gunther (2010). "The Development of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Germany (1914 – 1918)" (PDF). RTU Zinātniskie Raksti. Sērija 6, Mašīnzinātne Un Transports = Transport and Engineering, Elektronische Ressource = Scientific Journal of RTU [Scientific Journal of Riga Technical University]. 16: 24–31.
    OCLC 867160613
    . Retrieved August 3, 2020.
  • Zeitschrift für Flugwissenschaften und Weltraumforschung (1976) [1957–1958]. "Siemens torpedo glider". English: German Aerospace Society; German Aerospace Research and Research Institute; German Aerospace Research Institute. 5–6. Berlin: Springer: 135–136. .