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Iron Men And Tin Fish
Newpower Anthony

Iron Men And Tin Fish

the race to build a better Torpedo during World War II

Naval Institute Press (2006)
9781591146230
| Soft Cover
235 pages | 6 x 9.1 inch | USA | English
Dewey 940.54/5
LC Classification V850 .N49 2010
LC Control No. 2009049173

Subject

  • Torpedoes - Design And Construction - United States
  • World War, 1939-1945 - Equipment And Supplies
  • World War, 1939-1945 - Naval Operations
  • World War, 1939-1945 - Naval Operations, American

Plot

Building his case out of original research from U.S., British, and German archives, and from interviews with submarine veterans, Anthony Newpower presents a comprehensive study of the politics and technology behind the high failure rate of U.S. torpedoes early in WWII. His investigation focuses on the defects in the Mark XIV, which tended to run deeper than the set depth, detonate prematurely, and/or fail to explode when hitting a target. The author attributes the nearly two-year delay to correct these defects to senior officials who blamed the crews for poor marksmanship and training rather than acknowledge that a grossly defective weapon had been sent into the fleet. In the end, the submarine force overcame bureaucratic inertia and fixed the problems on its own. Newpower's examination of the decision-making process and his chilling accounts of experiences with faulty torpedoes broaden the book's appeal.

Personal

Owner MD
Index 2245
Added Date Oct 30, 2018 20:26:35
Modified Date Mar 27, 2024 12:14:25