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The Sting Ray is a British acoustic homing lightweight torpedo (LWT) manufactured by GEC-Marconi, who were later bought out by
BAE Systems BAE Systems plc (BAE) is a British multinational arms, security, and aerospace company based in London, England. It is the largest defence contractor in Europe, and ranked the seventh-largest in the world based on applicable 2021 revenues. ...
. It entered service in 1983.


Design and development

In the 1950s the Royal Navy was equipped with British designed and built Mk 30
air-dropped torpedo An aerial torpedo (also known as an airborne torpedo or air-dropped torpedo) is a torpedo launched from a torpedo bomber aircraft into the water, after which the weapon propels itself to the target. First used in World War I, air-dropped torpe ...
es. These were passive homing weapons which relied on detecting the noise from submarine targets. However, as submarine noise levels decreased these weapons became ineffective. A design for a British Mk 31 torpedo which would have used active echo-location sonar failed to receive Government approval for production. US Mk 44 torpedoes were purchased for the Royal Navy in the 1960s to fill this role, and later replaced by US Mk 46 torpedoes. A desire not to be dependent on US torpedo purchases led to a research programme starting in 1964 to develop a British torpedo. Initially designated Naval and Air Staff Requirement (NASR) 7511, it was (much later in the late 1970s) designated the Sting Ray torpedo.


Design

Design studies in the mid-1960s proposed that a tank of polyethylene oxide be carried behind the warhead. This polymer would be exuded at the nose to reduce the drag coefficient. Experiments using buoyancy-propelled torpedoes in 1969 had shown reductions in the drag coefficient up to 25%. However, by 1969 this scheme had been rejected in favour of carrying a larger battery. The homing system developed in the mid-1960s incorporated a spinning magnetic disc onto which the acoustic correlation algorithms were etched but this was replaced by
integrated circuit An integrated circuit or monolithic integrated circuit (also referred to as an IC, a chip, or a microchip) is a set of electronic circuits on one small flat piece (or "chip") of semiconductor material, usually silicon. Large numbers of tiny ...
technology when the disc sometimes failed to survive the impact of the weapon with the sea from high altitude launches. The original warhead concept was for a simple omnidirectional blast charge. However, studies in the 1970s showed that this would be inadequate against the large double-hulled submarines then entering service. A directed energy ( shaped charge) warhead was used in the production weapon. In 1976 the designs had to be completely revised. Swapping the project for buying a ready-made US torpedo was not considered because the torpedo was expected to be better, and was all-British. The project manager was Eric Risness CBE.


Manufacture

The torpedo was built at the MSDS (later MUSL) plants at Neston (in
Cheshire Cheshire ( ) is a ceremonial and historic county in North West England, bordered by Wales to the west, Merseyside and Greater Manchester to the north, Derbyshire to the east, and Staffordshire and Shropshire to the south. Cheshire's county t ...
) and MUSL in Farlington and Waterlooville near Portsmouth. Guidance systems were made by Sperry Gyroscope Company.


Deployment

The original in-service version (Sting Ray Mod 0) is officially documented as entering service in 1983, although Mark Higgitt's book ''Through Fire and Water'' (2013), which tells the story of HMS Ardent during the Falklands conflict, states that operational Stingray torpedoes were transferred to the ship immediately prior to its sailing date of 19 April 1982 under conditions of great secrecy (pp. 56, 61). It is propelled by a pump jet driven by an electric motor. Power is supplied by a magnesium/silver-chloride sea water battery. The propulsion method combines high speed, deep diving, agility and low noise levels. The weapon is provided with target and environmental information by the launching platform. Once launched it operates autonomously, with tactical software searching for the target using active sonar and then homing in without any further assistance. The software is designed to deal with the employment of countermeasures by the target. The weapon is designed to be launched from fixed wing or rotary winged aircraft and surface ships against submarine targets. The development of the torpedo cost £920 million. The Mark 24 Tigerfish submarine-launched torpedo had also overshot its initial budget.


Operators


Current operators

; * Royal Navy ; * Royal Norwegian Navy ; * Royal Thai Navy ; * Romanian Navy ; * Royal Moroccan Navy


Specifications

* Length: * Diameter: * Weight: * Warhead: of HE in a shaped charge * Speed: * Range: * Depth: * Propulsion: Magnesium/ silver chloride seawater battery ( Pump-jet) * Guidance Active/Passive sonar


Dimensions

Sting Ray has a diameter of and a length of around . It has a launch weight of , and carries a Torpex warhead. It has a speed of over a range of . The increased diameter compared to the US/NATO standard of , meant that RN ships equipped with STWS-1 torpedo tubes designed for the
Mark 46 torpedo The Mark 46 torpedo is the backbone of the United States Navy's lightweight anti-submarine warfare torpedo inventory and is the NATO standard. These aerial torpedo An aerial torpedo (also known as an airborne torpedo or air-dropped torpedo ...
couldn't fire Sting Ray. Only ships fitted/refitted with the larger STWS-2 or Magazine Torpedo Weapon System can use it. Sting Ray Mod 1 is intended for use against the same targets as Sting Ray Mod 0 but with an enhanced capability against small clad conventional submarines via a shaped-charge insensitive explosive warhead from
TDW TDW (Gesellschaft für verteidigungstechnische Wirksysteme mbH) is the European leader in the development and manufacture of warheads for guided weapons. The company was founded in 1994 and has 130 employees based in Schrobenhausen, Germany. TD ...
, and an improved shallow-water performance. It shares many hull components with the original weapon.


See also

* APR-3E torpedo - Russian equivalent * A244-S - Italian equivalent * Mark 54 Lightweight Torpedo - US Navy's equivalent * MU90 Impact - French/Italian equivalent * TAL Shyena - Indian equivalent * Yu-7 torpedo - Chinese equivalent * K745 Chung Sang Eo - South Korean equivalent * Type 97 light weight torpedo (G-RX4) - Japanese equivalent


References


External links


Royal Navy

Royal Air Force

BAE Systems



Photo of British Mk 30 torpedo

Drag Reduction Experiments for Sting Ray, 1968 - 1971

Norway order Sting Ray mod 1 for frigates, helicopters
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sting Ray Torpedo Naval weapons of the Cold War Naval weapons of the United Kingdom Torpedoes of the United Kingdom Aerial torpedoes Weapons and ammunition introduced in 1983 General Electric Company BAE Systems weapons systems