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German G7e torpedo with FAT (Federapparat), 1943 

vbbsmyt
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The Federapparat (FAT) or ‘spring device’ was developed to increase the probability of hitting a ship or escort in a convoy. The idea was to make the torpedo zig-zag across the convoy if it missed the initial target. The FAT run structure had 2 parts - an initial straight run to close the intended target, and to ensure the torpedo was clear of the firing submarine before it reversed course, and a series of course reversals where the torpedo turned through 180 degrees after running a defined leg of 1,200 m or 1,900m.
The FAT was introduced in 1943, initially for the wet heater air-driven G7a torpedo, but restricted to nighttime attacks in case the allies observed the looping paths of the air trails. Use in the Mediterranean and North sea were also forbidden due to the clearer water.
The electric G7e torpedo was a candidate of the FAT, but was restricted initially by its limited range - 5,000m. With the increasing convoy escort convoy capability, it was becoming dangerous to approach too close to a convoy. However, the German engineers managed to upgrade the batteries by developing a 17-plate cell (previous their lead-acid cells had 13 plates) which delivered a 50% range increase for the torpedo at 30 knots. This torpedo was designated the TIIIa, and is the subject of this animation.
The TIIIa used compressed air to drive its control surfaces: the Gyro, Gyro servo to operate the rudders and depth servo to maintain the desired depth. The FAT was also powered by comprised air. Because of the increased range capability (and run time), two additional compressed air flasks were fitted at the front of the battery compartment. The control air did not leave a significant trail, however, so the torpedo could be used in all theatres and time of day.
The FAT had 4 control disks, one for each of the run paths - long loop, initial turn to the right, long loop turn to the left, short loop right and short loop left. The run path and initial straight run distance were set using a single input shaft. 4 turns of the shaft would firstly select the initial run distance, and then physically raise the control disk set to the next run path type. Thus 16 turns of the shaft would cycle through all 4 run types and return to the default setting - 15,000m initial run for Long loop path, turn first to the right.
When the setting cam set was being raised (or lowered) the indicator shows the marking ‘flasch’ (wrong), since if the torpedo was fired with ‘falsch’ showing, the initial run would be zero, and the tun to left or right ambiguous, thus endangering the firing submarine. The torpedo tube-mounted setting device physically prevents a setting when ‘falsch’ is showing.
The control disks have a set of ridges, valleys and mid-levels. A control piston rides on these cams. In the mid-level, the gyro controls the rudder servo in the normal manner. However, when a ridge or valley is encountered, the air driven FAT piston forces the rudder servo to the left or right, and so turns the torpedo through 180 degrees. The Gyro outer gimble now has two control cams, one to steer the selected fire control gyro angle, and the other (lower) to steer the reciprocal course.
The FAT was relatively short lived. With a FAT, the convoy would pass over the looped run path. However, the next variant, LUT, was arranged to advance the loop pattern along a convoy’s course and speed. This is too complex for me, and I shall not attempt to animate it.
See also my RU-vid animation of the G7e torpedo:
• German G7e Torpedo 1941
The animation was made using Cinema 4D and Quicktime Player v7
Music tracks are:
Revelation and October Sky, Copyright AKM Music, www.akmmusic.co.uk
References:
‘Die Torpedos der deutschen U-Boote’ Eberhard Rösseler, 2005, ISBN 3-8132-08427
RM6-3149 Federapparat für den Torpedo G7e, 1942

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28 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 405   
@timengineman2nd714
@timengineman2nd714 2 года назад
I just realized that an additional benefit of the FAT Torpedo is that the explosion can occur on the opposite side of a ship than the sub is on! This means the Destroyers and Destroyer Escort would like go off in the wrong direction looking for a U-Boat that wasn't there!!!
@legitscoper3259
@legitscoper3259 2 года назад
Very good noticed ! Although it never was intended by captains to deliberately miss on the first pass, this was a welcome effect if the FAT has down what it was supposed to do, recover a missed shot.
@timengineman2nd714
@timengineman2nd714 2 года назад
@@legitscoper3259 Yeah, I imagine retrieving a fully armed torpedo is not on the list of fun things to do! (However, I wasn't suggesting to make it miss on the first pass.) However, since it has to have a positive (nose up) attitude, I imagine that the "eel" (what the Germans call their torpedos) has a negative buoyancy and sink once the batteries has drain to the point it couldn't keep it at it's set depth...
@dermax1254
@dermax1254 2 года назад
But in 1943 the destroyers had sonar and radar systems in combination with the broken Enigma code. So the Kriegsmarine has already lost the navy war before this torpedo came out.
@legitscoper3259
@legitscoper3259 2 года назад
@@dermax1254 yes. But Germans didn't believe the code was broken. But the Sonar of that time, ASDIC only could cover a cone shape below the ship, if the sub was too far off, they couldn't see it.
@dermax1254
@dermax1254 2 года назад
@@legitscoper3259 Ah thank's of the Sonar information. I haven't known this, about the effectiveness.👍🏼
@pieterveenders9793
@pieterveenders9793 2 года назад
These mechanical simulations of the torpedo mechanism and the maritime simulations of them being fired into a convoy are amazing, especially how you did all the torpedo internals! You must have put a lot of time and effort into finding out how they worked and producing the simulations, I doubt it could have been easy finding that information? Your video's deserve to be on something like Discovery Channel or National Geographic!
@b43xoit
@b43xoit 2 года назад
No apostrophe in video's.
@udokrause832
@udokrause832 9 месяцев назад
2 Zweischneidiges Schwert. Es kann dich selber treffen!
@SolarWebsite
@SolarWebsite 2 года назад
Amazing how they did this with purely mechanical means 80 years ago. Nowadays, a 10 cent IC would do all this, but having watched this that feels like cheating 😉
@jfan4reva
@jfan4reva 2 года назад
Now days, the torpedo starts homing in on the target when it gets close. It's no longer running blind. More expensive than a 10 cent IC, but it becomes 'fire and forget'. 1 torp, 1 ship.
@ThatGuy-cw8gb
@ThatGuy-cw8gb 2 года назад
And in 2022 navy’s are moving back to battery powered torpedos. Something about a self oxidizing fuel that produces hydrogen cyanide as a by product in a steel tube…
@QurttoRco
@QurttoRco 2 года назад
Tomahawk introduced in 1980 can travel close to 1000 miles using nothing but ground features as guidance, no gps needed.... Sometimes I wonder what can truly cutting edge stuff do
@trader2137
@trader2137 2 года назад
antikythera mechanism was done 2500 years ago though...
@lordgarion514
@lordgarion514 2 года назад
Not cheating. We spent orders of magnitude more money developing that $0.10 IC, than they did all the technology they used. And it took a LOT longer too.
@bumblebeebob
@bumblebeebob 2 года назад
Fascinating! I had no idea that such a system existed! Thank you!
@gvii
@gvii 2 года назад
I was waiting for this. I have no idea where you find the technical data and drawings for your modeling, I have to believe they're not exactly what you'd call readily available. But I'm really glad you are able to find them. These torpedo videos are absolutely fascinating to me. I have always wondered how the FaT fish worked. Amazing bit of mechanical computing. Thank you very, very much for putting in the time to do these. You have no idea how much I appreciate what you do.
@homesqueeze1692
@homesqueeze1692 2 года назад
Glad to see your still posting these feats of engineering, via that smooth animation. You deserve a gig doing this for the history/military channel. Best of luck and thank you brother.
@JM-nt5fm
@JM-nt5fm 2 года назад
Absolutely incredible animation and attention to detail. This is so much work. Truly impressive!!!
@kk71662
@kk71662 2 года назад
Superb animation. Quite an achievement to understand how it works just from a book (in a foreign language too)
@lucabrasi8790
@lucabrasi8790 2 года назад
Masterpiece of German engineering. Pure art
@MinecraftGamer3.0
@MinecraftGamer3.0 2 года назад
Great explanation! Finally someone has explained it comprehensibly! Do you want to make a video about the "Zaunkönig" too?
@Internetzspacezshipz
@Internetzspacezshipz 2 года назад
This is really freaking cool. Awesome detail.
@mibo747
@mibo747 2 года назад
STUNNING + MARVELLOUS, many thanks I would never know....
@redacted5052
@redacted5052 2 года назад
As a Silent Hunter 2/3/4 addict, this was amazing. Thank you!
@dnf7778
@dnf7778 2 года назад
Had no idea all that was going on inside that metal tube, great video
@UnknownUser-pf9rk
@UnknownUser-pf9rk 5 месяцев назад
Me, a modern day engineer, having no idea what I'm even looking at! Who on earth would come up with something ingenious as this?
@DualDesertEagle
@DualDesertEagle 2 года назад
Wow, imagine ur ship gets hit with by one of these and everyone on the remaining ships starts looking for subs in the direction the torp came from, but can't find any coz the torpedo was actually fired from the opposite side and only struck after making a 180. Or even worse, imagine the above happened and there were allied subs in the direction the torp came from, everyone would think it was friendly fire when it really wasn't.
@Mr-pv1ed
@Mr-pv1ed 2 года назад
никогда бы не подумал что в торпеде такой сложный механизм! 😯🤔
@derrekvanee4567
@derrekvanee4567 2 года назад
As someone who was working on a cold war submarine simulator, nice work!
@mbryson2899
@mbryson2899 2 года назад
Reminds me of the motorized plastic ship models I built in the 70s that had interchangeable cams to select from predetermined courses.
@jfan4reva
@jfan4reva 2 года назад
Very nice animation! It's cool to see 3d renderings of machinery, especially for an old guy like me who grew up looking at old fuzzy black and white photos that needed to have the relevant parts highlighted to show what was being described.
@billyponsonby
@billyponsonby 2 года назад
Astonishing drawing and explanation
@АлександрПискунов-г8я
ничего не понимаю в титрах но зрительно это просто произведение искусства и наверное стоит оху....ю кучу денег даже для развитой страны
@yurakondratuk253
@yurakondratuk253 2 года назад
Она стоила шо пиздец. У него много роликов. И паро-газовая и простая электрическая. Ждем дальше видосов
@dudesqr
@dudesqr 2 года назад
I just got these on the game UBOAT build 131, freaking crazy dude
@_Viking
@_Viking 2 года назад
This was very interesting. Great work :) I'm working on a similar project which will be a rendering of a full-rigged ship that was attacked by a German submarine in WW1. This specific sub is type U43 and name SU50. The captain was Gerhard Berger and he sunk my great grandfather's ship Blenheim in 1916. My goal is to recreate that exact moment in Unreal Engine. But there exists virtually no image or drawing of this sub that I know of. So if someone could direct me to a site, a book, or even a museum where I can find more information on this sub I will be very happy :)
@jpbatinic
@jpbatinic 2 года назад
wow you rock, this is awesome, well done, keep it comin pls, thank you
@mattrika4874
@mattrika4874 2 года назад
Brilliant - well done Rob Brassington👍
@_tyrannus
@_tyrannus 2 года назад
I'd been looking forward to this one for a long time, thank you!
@Katniss218
@Katniss218 2 года назад
Damn that is A LOT of CAD
@ant7699
@ant7699 2 года назад
Those Germans...they had a lot of skilled people
@ФридрихЙопрст
@ФридрихЙопрст 2 года назад
Впервые узнал, что торпеда идёт таким маршрутом! Всегда думал, что только прямо! Благодарю!
@Hopeless_and_Forlorn
@Hopeless_and_Forlorn 2 года назад
So, I wish we could know the conversation between the sonar man and the bridge of an escort ship the first time one of these torpedoes began looping back and forth through a convoy. Must have been the source of some confusion if they had no previous knowledge of its deployment.
@jonathanhamel
@jonathanhamel 2 года назад
Amazing work
@王硕-s3m
@王硕-s3m Год назад
Solved my curiosity about the G6AV Torpedo I saw at the Budapest Military History Museum, its intricate and complex design is astonishing, and I wonder how it operates.
@garrettmineo
@garrettmineo 2 года назад
Amazing research and illustration, I bet the WWII era Uboat crews would have benefited from this video.
@carlosvillarroel4168
@carlosvillarroel4168 2 года назад
Amazing explanation, thanks
@DanielMorales-zq1xn
@DanielMorales-zq1xn 2 года назад
Realmente impresionante la tecnología es fascinante!!!!!
@Make_it_easy001
@Make_it_easy001 2 года назад
Why are there gas bubbles in the electric torpedo animation?
@vbbsmyt
@vbbsmyt 2 года назад
Watch the video - compressed air is used to drive the gyro, the gyro server motor and the Depth servo motor. This air is exhausted into the torpedo body and then vented off.
@ptonpc
@ptonpc 2 года назад
That is impressive. Both the engineering and the video. Thanks.
@sahhaf1234
@sahhaf1234 2 года назад
Do you plan to make a program on german acoustic torpedoes?
@Wurstbrot5555
@Wurstbrot5555 2 года назад
Fascinating. I wonder if this is possible for today's engineers in this computer world.
@legitscoper3259
@legitscoper3259 2 года назад
Todays Torpedos are just statanic Sonar, and Computer steered, homing torpedoes, that even can be remote controlled by hand. And can swim with like 40 kts for 40 km or so... you can assume that every modern day torpedo that is shot, will hit it's target. This is why modern age Submarines are not used for Anti Ship combat as main task anymore... and if anti Ship combat, they fire an from torpedo tube launched Missile that will steer itself to it's target using radar. In WW2 was only one confirmed Submarine sunk Submarine scenario, despite Submarine NOT being intended or invented to hunt Submarines... Submarines hunt ships. But modern age combat has shifted this by 180° Modern age Submarine, are exclusively for hunting Submarines, and by the way dropping off an ICBM
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
Yes, of course it is... When we (RNoN) applied the latest version of the controlunit for the norwegian coastal artillery's T1 mod 1 torpedoes in 1992 (T1 mod 1 was the ex-Kriegsmarine G7a(TI) modified with wireguidance in 1970), it was fully computerized with two way-communication and automatic guidance from the firecontrolsystem. If the torpedo missed it's target and/or lost connection, an automatic search-pattern very similar to the german Fat/Lut was initiated (obviously, computerguided).
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
@@legitscoper3259 Radarguided surface-to-surface missiles..?
@legitscoper3259
@legitscoper3259 2 года назад
@@havardhovdet9217 SSM (Ship to Ship Missiles) [also Submarine launch capable) " and active radar homing" en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-ship_missile Yes. Modern stuff is wild
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 2 года назад
What I'd like to know is why the G7e torpedo's propellors were twin-bladed while the G7a's propellors were six-bladed?
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
I can't give you an exact answer, but judging from preserved/available archive material from Torpedo-Versuch-Anstalt, Kriegsmarine and the allied post-war examination of german torpedo development, a lot of research went into the various aspects of the torpedodesign, including propellers and rudders (including a lot of model-work and practical testing in watertanks/pools). An important goal with the development and manufacture of the electric propulsioned torpedoes was to simplify the process and reduce cost. Thus, the G7e-models were considerable less robust compared to the G7a(TI) torpedo - especially in regards to their weaker "woolwich"-type tail with propellers behind the rudders (which was the main reason for the G7e-models not being allowed for surface-launch, with exeption of the TIIId and TVa torpedoes, adapted for S-Boote). Another factor to consider, is the engine-performance which was different for wet-heater vs electric, as well as the torpedo's weight and speed. Almost all G7e-models used the GL 231/Z5 engine, with the following specs (examples, showing different power-outtake for various torpedomodels): * 1700 rpm / 100 Hp at 30 kn (example: TIII) * 1350 rpm / 55 Hp at 24 kn (example: TV) * 1100 rpm / 30 Hp at 17,5 kn (example: TIIIc) * 500 rpm / 7 Hp at 9 kn (TIIId) The G7a(TI) had a 4-cylindre singular piston steam engine (45% filling-grade). The engine was altered a couple of times since it's original design from 1934 (for instance, the first version's engineblock was weak and would often crack at the highest speed; Regardless the redesigned engine introduced ca 1942, the only vessels allowed to use the 44 kn speed throughout the war was the S-Boote. The following specs is for the post 1942 engine-version: * 1170 rpm / 110 Hp at 30 kn * 1280 rpm / 255 Hp at 40 kn * 1470 rpm / 350 Hp at 44 kn The G7a(TI) was originally designed with 4-blade propellers, but at some point (not sure exactly when, but it was before 1941), this was changed to 6-blades. This affected the accuracy of the distance-mechanism which was "calibrated" for the 4-blade propellers (in practical usage for exercises, the torpedo's maximum running distance could extend by up to 1500 metres beyond the set distance).
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 2 года назад
@@havardhovdet9217 Wow! Thanks.
@JWCreations
@JWCreations 2 года назад
Wild that they did this with slide-rules. Same for the atom bomb.
@shlomibarg
@shlomibarg 2 года назад
Great old technology , Love your channel
@Desertduleler_88
@Desertduleler_88 2 года назад
Great animation of the inner workings of how the Germans calculated trajectory with torpedoes.
@Eduard_Kolesnikov
@Eduard_Kolesnikov Год назад
thx for beautiful work
@kimjanek646
@kimjanek646 2 года назад
Another cool WW2 technology I wasn't aware of :)
@legitscoper3259
@legitscoper3259 2 года назад
Truly mechanical computers. And this isn't even the highest fidelity of German WW2 torpedoes... they've invented homing torpedoes the *G7es*
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
That's debateable... The acoustic torpedoes were way less effective than claimed by Germany during the war. Post-WW2 analysis by UK/US showed programsteering to be the major technical achievement in torpedodevelopment during WW2 (obviously, partly due to the rather premature stage of acoustic sensor technology at the time, and the short duration it saw action).
@MrDgwphotos
@MrDgwphotos 2 года назад
@@havardhovdet9217 The US Navy Mark 14 mine (air dropped acoustic homing torpedo, referred to as a mine for security reasons) , nicknamed "Fido", was quite effective against U-Boats.
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
@@MrDgwphotos Yes, the Mk 24 (not 14) was quite effective. However, again I struggle to see what relevance a US antisubmarine weapon has in a discussion about german acoustic homing anti-surface torpedoes?
@stevefriswell5422
@stevefriswell5422 2 года назад
Fantastic work, thanks for posting.
@Silver_Dragon_Minoslas28A27
@Silver_Dragon_Minoslas28A27 2 года назад
great animations. Has some points to expand that videos about uboats: - Uboat systems. - A better video talking about fire control, Determinate the targer heading and the speed. - A video talk about german fire data mechanical computer. - How work a salvo firing on uboats - mines with minelaying system. - periscope working. - german submarine weapons (88mm, 30mm, 20mm), countermeasures and decoys.
@stoneylonesome4062
@stoneylonesome4062 2 года назад
@vbbsmyt Will you ever make a video animation about the Voyager, Pioneer or New Horizons space probes?
@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385
@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385 2 года назад
Lot harder to get accurate mechanical drawings of those guys.
@stoneylonesome4062
@stoneylonesome4062 2 года назад
@@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385 i think it would be cool. He could explain the pioneer plaque and voyager golden records
@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385
@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385 2 года назад
@@stoneylonesome4062 You notice how everything that he does videos of, there's lots of moving parts and complicated animation? Not so much of that on a plaque.
@stoneylonesome4062
@stoneylonesome4062 2 года назад
@@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385 Yeah, I know, I just thought it might be interesting.
@Xtoxinlolinecronomicon
@Xtoxinlolinecronomicon 2 года назад
Unironically fantastic German engineering.
@chooseyouhandle
@chooseyouhandle 2 года назад
Very interesting machine. Very complex.
@LGbaSS-bi2ml
@LGbaSS-bi2ml 2 года назад
Do you take recommendations? I would love to see the Italian Breda modello 30 or the japanese type 11. Heat videos by the way, I have been subscribed for years and love your content!
@KA-jm2cz
@KA-jm2cz 2 года назад
Incorrect: 3rd Reich boats have not "split image" sighting. They used milliradians and counted distance.
@derglwerft
@derglwerft 2 года назад
Interesting topic. Good explanation. Professional video. Great!!! 👏
@567Бубалайф
@567Бубалайф 2 года назад
Какая умная торпеда, наверно сама возвращается к подводной лодке если ни одну цель не поразила.😄
@swiftspooner66
@swiftspooner66 Год назад
If this is how complex WWII German torpedoes were then I would love to see a video like this about the first world war German torpedoes but I'm not sure if you would have enough information on them to make a video like this on them but if you do that that would be awesome to see how they would go about designing a torpedo with their era of technology
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 11 месяцев назад
This is an electricc propulsioned torpedo. It has s very simple design compared to the wetheater (steam-propulsioned) torpedoes. The wetheater-design didn't change much for the torpedoes produced in the period 1910-1950, so WW1 torpedoes (ie the various G/6 and G/7 models) would in principle be very much like the WW2 G7a(TI).
@МаркАврелий-э2г
@МаркАврелий-э2г 7 месяцев назад
Сумрачный немецкий гений!
@billcrismon
@billcrismon 2 года назад
That was a good illustration... I would like to see one on the German T5 Zaukoenig (Wren)Torpedo....
@alm5992
@alm5992 2 года назад
At first this seemed like a training video for subs on why you should always get your math correct or you will always miss by a meter.
@arthurapostle1872
@arthurapostle1872 2 года назад
they just wrote aq phy script for boomboom delivery
@АнатолийЛысенко-о9н
@АнатолийЛысенко-о9н 8 месяцев назад
Отличное видео, эх ещё бы перевод..цены небылбы...
@mohamedomar208
@mohamedomar208 2 года назад
SolarWebsite 2 weeks ago Amazing
@shanebaker3404
@shanebaker3404 Месяц назад
Where can I download this beautiful yet dark song?
@vbbsmyt
@vbbsmyt Месяц назад
Music details are in the notes for the video.
@heinrichkarter162
@heinrichkarter162 2 года назад
FAT Bedeutet "Flächen Absuch Torpedo" nix mit Feder ihr Experten die Abstands Pistole war bei dieser Art Torpedo üblich
@rollyherrera623
@rollyherrera623 2 года назад
Nicely animated!!!
@josedias4664
@josedias4664 2 года назад
Impressionante, que máquina!
@hakeemzahardi9207
@hakeemzahardi9207 2 года назад
I once read that the cost of 1 torpedo is equivalent to 1 panzer iv. Now I understand why
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
No, not even close. The Panzerkampfwagen IV had a production-cost of about 103000 to 116000 Reichsmark (depending on version and time of manufacture). The cost of the german G7a(TI) wet-heater torpedo in 1939 was 24000 Reichsmark, and demanded over 3700 man-hours to manufacture. Due to simplified and more effective production + reduced use of costly metals as Nickel, Tin and Copper, the cost was reduced to 13500 reichamark in 1943 with about 1700 man-hours to manufacture. The electric propulsioned G7e(TIII) torpedoes were much simpler and demanded about 1200 man-hours to manufacture. I don't have the exact cost of 1943, but I believe it was less than 50% of the G7a(TI). Ie: You'd get about twenty-five G7e(TIII) torpedoes for the cost of one Pz.Kpfw. IV... Cost of modern torpedoes are quite another topic though, and would normally be over 1 million US dollar a piece.
@rolfharry4753
@rolfharry4753 2 года назад
incredible complex
@huyphanquang1780
@huyphanquang1780 2 года назад
Genius brain
@hawksights
@hawksights 2 года назад
Nice animations. Really nice
@ryanu6424
@ryanu6424 2 года назад
What about a Naval Optical Rangefinder? Can you make a video on how it works?
@huginn_og_muninn
@huginn_og_muninn 2 месяца назад
What about LuT torpedo?
@trololo4217
@trololo4217 2 года назад
like swiss clocks. sad. but true.
@b43xoit
@b43xoit 2 года назад
Today's tech probably uses a μprocessor.
@bestamerica
@bestamerica 2 года назад
' was this germany G7e torpedo used a R/C system
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
There were no torpedoes with radio-control, besides the experimental "NY" rocket-propelled surface (hydrofoil) torpedo that never passed the prototype-stage.
@jinsoochoi6432
@jinsoochoi6432 2 года назад
Awesome video!
@kaekae4010
@kaekae4010 2 года назад
wow what a work
@johanalitalo8331
@johanalitalo8331 2 года назад
Very nice detail on the fat function. Hope to see more videos of the G7E.
@Maxfahrer
@Maxfahrer 2 года назад
FAT does not mean Federapparat but rather Flächenabsuchender Torpedo. The Federapparat war the „computer“
@vbbsmyt
@vbbsmyt 2 года назад
The official German manual for the FAT (Federapparat for den Torpedo G7a, Herausgegeben von der Torpedoversuchsanstalt, Eckernförde im December 1942 Genehmigt!, Der Inspekteur der Torpedoinspektion) (Spring apparatus for the torpedo G7e, published by the Torpedo Research Institute, Eckernförde in December 1942 Approved!, The Inspector of Torpedo Inspection) on page 3 is headed Federapparat für den Torpedo G7e (FAT = Torpedo mit Federapparat) So I will stick with the official definition.
@Maxfahrer
@Maxfahrer 2 года назад
@@vbbsmyt the source does not give a direct definition for FAT. I have done research too and found out, that my definition was slightly incorrect too. I found different definitions: Flächenabsuchtorpedo (area searching torpedo) and Federapparattorpedo. The first describes the function of the torpedo most precisely. The predecessor LUT also used the Federapparat. LUT stands for Lageunabhängiger Torpedo.
@andrejrockshox
@andrejrockshox Год назад
what and when spins the gyro? also when and how was steam put into steam torpedos?
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 11 месяцев назад
The gyroscope is spun up (200 kg/cm^2) and maintained (8 kg/cm^2) by pressurized air. This happens as soon as the starterlevel is pulled back by the torpedo moving about 15 cm forward inside the tube. Steam is produced from freshwater circulating an internal boiler/heater. In the german G7a(TI) the fuel (decaline) is burned producing overheated steam which is mixed with high-pressure air before being fed to the inletvalves for the pistons in the engine. In the G7a(TI) the combustioning inside the heater is started by pressurized air releasing a mechanism igniting a powdercharge a few seconds after the starterlevel has been pushed back. The charge burns for 2-4 seconds, and by then a steady supply of fuel and water has been established from the pressurized tanks to maintain the combustion and steam-production.
@tomgold4942
@tomgold4942 2 года назад
That's waaay more complicated than a car for example. How did they do that 80 years ago?
@scootergeorge7089
@scootergeorge7089 2 года назад
Little more than cams and clockwork. Now the Norden bombsite was a mechanical computer and much more impressive.
@ВладиславВладислав-и4ю
Make, please, the mechanism of the V-1 and V-2 rockets.
@gerhardheinrichs271
@gerhardheinrichs271 2 года назад
Hätte gern diese Dokumentation in deutscher Sprache gesehen.
@vbbsmyt
@vbbsmyt 2 года назад
Bundesarchiv, Freiburg. Ref RM 6 3149 FAT
@TauroChuck
@TauroChuck 2 года назад
That was awesome stuff
@demos113
@demos113 2 года назад
Good work. 🙂
@gabicanton4817
@gabicanton4817 2 года назад
Like like like 👍🏻
@2copy3copy4cpoy
@2copy3copy4cpoy 2 года назад
TORPEDO LORE
@kiereluurs1243
@kiereluurs1243 2 года назад
On the German Wikipedia-page of 'Flächen-Absuch-Torpedo' there is an impressive picture of the actual mechanism.
@vbbsmyt
@vbbsmyt 2 года назад
Very impressive, however the picture shows the FAT III, otherwise known as the LUT (Lagenunabhängiger Torpedo", translated to "Orientation-Independent-Torpedo)
@christopherbrent5168
@christopherbrent5168 2 года назад
Jesus christ
@ВатнаяфабрикаимениКрасныхпарти
Ждём видео про устройство электроакустических торпед
@samnelson9038
@samnelson9038 5 месяцев назад
Clockwork torpedoes
@АнтопКотов
@АнтопКотов 2 года назад
Чудо инжинерной мысли
@jdm1152
@jdm1152 2 года назад
I work of engineering art but sadly also death.
@tuncefe2735
@tuncefe2735 3 месяца назад
music ?
@vbbsmyt
@vbbsmyt 3 месяца назад
Please read the notes, at the bottom
@Omnihil777
@Omnihil777 2 года назад
Here is a great mechanical wonder for your talents: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-hd-5JBwypQs.html The Kretz Rifle from the 1910s. THAT would be fascinating to see animated.
@AndreSilva-yg4vy
@AndreSilva-yg4vy 2 года назад
Porquê a Alemanha tinha tantos muitos engenheiros bons ?
@habibfebriansyah123
@habibfebriansyah123 2 года назад
Next video ZIS 3
@himmlerismchina2396
@himmlerismchina2396 2 года назад
it seems G7a cannot FAT at different speed
@havardhovdet9217
@havardhovdet9217 2 года назад
?? Fat was primarily used on G7a(TI) torpedoes
@Chironex_Fleckeri
@Chironex_Fleckeri 2 года назад
Impossibru
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