US3857321A - Submarine missile launch system - Google Patents

Submarine missile launch system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3857321A
US3857321A US00383586A US38358673A US3857321A US 3857321 A US3857321 A US 3857321A US 00383586 A US00383586 A US 00383586A US 38358673 A US38358673 A US 38358673A US 3857321 A US3857321 A US 3857321A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
missile
tunnel
submarine
launch
jets
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00383586A
Inventor
P Cohen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Subcom Inc
Original Assignee
Subcom Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Subcom Inc filed Critical Subcom Inc
Priority to US00383586A priority Critical patent/US3857321A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3857321A publication Critical patent/US3857321A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41FAPPARATUS FOR LAUNCHING PROJECTILES OR MISSILES FROM BARRELS, e.g. CANNONS; LAUNCHERS FOR ROCKETS OR TORPEDOES; HARPOON GUNS
    • F41F3/00Rocket or torpedo launchers
    • F41F3/08Rocket or torpedo launchers for marine torpedoes
    • F41F3/10Rocket or torpedo launchers for marine torpedoes from below the surface of the water

Definitions

  • c1 89/l.8l, 89/l.8l6, 114/238 tunnel Provided with a formed of a matrix of 51 1111.
  • the exitend 39 3 3 L816 the matrix is provided with a radial inward seal ring adapted to flexibly engage the missile.
  • the fingers are References Cited selectively provided with sensors monitoring the UNITED STATES PATENTS movement of the missile, which sensors control a hydraulic counter-torquing system regulating the'ejec- 3,072,022 .l/l963 Wood et al.
  • the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for launching projectiles, such as torpedos, from submarines and in particular to the construction and operation of the outer launch tunnel.
  • Submarines are conventionally formed with a pressure-tight hull surrounded by a skin or outer shield. Between the'skin and the hull, various ballast tanks, fuel tanks, etc. are stored, and the space is freely flooded by sea water so as not to require pressurization.
  • the projectile is prepared and initially fired through a launch tube (torpedo tube) which breaches the pressurized hull but which terminates well before the outer skin shield.
  • a launch tube titaniumpedo tube
  • a tunnel generally of a larger diameter than the launch tube itself. The forward end of the tunnel is closed by a shutter which cuts across the tunnel so that, in the closed position, the shutter fairs into the lines of the hull.
  • the outer tunnels are in the free flooding portion of the submarine and are not subjected to large differential pressures. They are constructed of metal of a thickness to permit ease of handling and fabrication and for resistance to the shocks and vibrations of usage.
  • the distance from the muzzle of the inner launch tube to the shutter opening is generally shorter than the length of a projectile.
  • the forward end of the weapon enters the ocean flowfield around the moving submarine before the aft end of the projectile clears the closer-fitting inner tube.
  • the missile is subjected to large torques, occasionally in more than one plane. Further, as soon as it is physically free to do so, the missile begins to rotate, that is, to pitch and/or yaw, and to translate along transverse axes as well as to move forward.
  • the result is that the projectile frequently strikes some part of the tunnel or shutter opening before it is completely free of the submarine.
  • Such impacts increase in severity with increasing submarine speed, and often result in great damage to the projectile or the submarine.
  • the tunnel is, therefore, made larger in diameter than the inner launch tube so that small amounts of weapon rotation or translation do not result in contact.
  • One of the most widely used methods of ejecting the missile from the closely fitting launch tube is to generate a slug of water which enters the aft end of the launch tube and pushes the missile out as if it were a free piston.
  • the missile frequently has a streamlined stern section.
  • a system for control of the ejection of a submarine missile wherein the launch tunnel, between the inner. tube and the sea, is lined with an elastic resilient member or members adapted to absorb the strains and shocks and deflect the moving projectile.
  • the liner comprises a matrix of radially extending fingers which are separated by longitudinal and annular transverse grooves to form a grid pattern of individually deflectable units.
  • the liner may be formed as a unitary carpet-line structure vor of individual sections of finger projections secured to the surface of the launch tunnel in tubular fashion.
  • the system may include a directional and force sensing arrangement coupled with a monitoring arrangement by which the direction, ejection force and torque on the missile may be regulated.
  • This arrangement includes a plurality of sensors embedded within selected ones of the resilient fingers, and a plurality of hydraulic jet nozzles selectively supplied with pressurized liquid, which 'are activated in a programmed manner in response to the sensors to exert a regulating force on the missile.
  • the cylindrical lining of the launch tube provides a chamber in which the deflection of the missile, traveling at high speeds, can be dampened and absorbed. It also provides the means by which the sensors of the control and regulating system can be spaced at any selected point within the launch tunnel, considering the longitudinal as well as radial position of the missile with respect to any point in the tunnel. It further provides the hydraulic control and regulating system with a high degree of flexibility enabling the exercise of countertorquing forces on the missile in any programmed manner, taking clearly into account speed, position and force of the missile. Further, lining the tunnel with a resilient carpet of fingers reduces theannular space between the missile and tunnel wall in a manner to decrease destructive contact therebetween.
  • a further feature of the present invention lies in providing the outer or exit end of the cylindrical matrix of resilient fingers with a sphincter" like seal comprising an inwardly directed flexible ring extending above the height of the fingers, so as to have an inner diameter slightly smaller than the diameter of the missile being ejected.
  • the ring engages the surface of the missile and thus, in combination with it, seals the exit end of the tunnel so that during ejection the interior of the launch tunnel is separated from the exterior ocean currents and forces. This seal prevents counter currents or ocean pressure forces from acting on the missile and separates the ocean pressure from acting on the slug of liquid propelling the missile from within the tube.
  • the use of the resilient lining of fingers reduces the annular area around the missile. This permits greater transfer of momentum from the ejection pulse to the missile while the latter tunnel l permits more efficient transer of energy from the ejection pulse to the missile.
  • the ejection system can continue to operate effectively during the passage of the missle through the outer tube 10. This new capability permits a lower acceleration over a longer distance and can give higher exit velocities with less peak power in the ejection equipment and with lower acoustic transients.
  • the portion of the matrix of fingers adjacent the sphincter opening is progressively tapered from the diameter of the tunnel liner to the diameter of the sphincter seal ring so that the missile is properly guided.
  • the sphincter ring may be prestressed into a given bias and it may be arranged in any plane relative to the longitudinal axis of the tube.
  • FIG. 1 is a horizontal sectional view through a launch tube and launch tunnel employing the liner and sensor system of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a sectional view similar to FIG. 1 showing the outer end of a launch tunnel having a modified form of the invention
  • FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram of the sensing and monitoring system employed in the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view indicating the arrangement of sensors and hydraulic jet ports for control of the missile
  • FIG. 5 is a development of the arrangement shown in FIG. 4;
  • FIG. 6 is a sectional view taken along line 66' of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 7 is an enlarged view of the portion encircled in FIG. 6 showing one form of sensor.
  • FIG. 8 is a view similar to FIG. 7 showing a second form of sensor.
  • FIG. 1 the present invention will be seen embodied within an otherwise conventional torpedo tunnel, generally depicted by the numeral 10, running from the torpedo launch tube 12 mounted in the body B of a submarine to the outer skin shield S in conventional manner.
  • the body B and skin S are joined by not shown means to provide an area surrounding at least part of the submarine which is designed to freely flood with sea water.
  • the launch tube 12 is provided with a muzzle door to allow the missile (not shown) to be ejected into the tunnel 10.
  • the tunnel 10 is provided with a plurality of fluid jet inlets 16 for the introduction of countertorquing fluid, as water, intended to accelerate and correct the trajectory of the missile.
  • the exterior of the tunnel is provided with a conventional shutter opening 18.
  • the jets 16 are uniformly apportioned into a plurality of annular rows, spaced along the length of the tunnel.
  • the rows of jets are parallel to each other, and arranged transversely to the longitudinal axis of the tunnel, although certain rows may be set at an elliptical angle to the axis (preferably parallel to the plane of the shutter opening), to obtain as large a moment arm as is feasible on the accelerated missile.
  • the fluid jets 16 in each row are connected individually by pipes 20 to common torroidal manifold 22, which is connected via a conduit 24 to a source of the counter-. torquing water.
  • the same may be a reservoir, or the ocean, and includes pumping, pressure regulating and other means for its delivery.
  • solenoid operated valve 26 Interposed in each of the pipes 20 leading to the individual jets is solenoid operated valve 26 responsive to a control signal, in a manner later described.
  • the angle at which the jets themselves open in the surface of the tube may be selected as desired to best meet the requirements set for operation of a particular torpedo under given parameters. Likewise, the number and spacing between jets and the rows ofjets may also be chosen as desired.
  • the construction of the launch tube and tunnel is .described, and the operation of the jet assist is made of elastic material, such as natural or synthetic rubber, plastic or the like, and is provided over its entire surface area with longitudinal grooves 32 and transverse grooves 34 to provide an interior surface face 36 having a plurality of spaced inwardly projecting fingers 38.
  • the liner 30 is made as a unitary molded carpet-like structure which may be seamed or welded together as a tube in situ.
  • the fingerlike projection 38 can be individually formed as by molding, cutting or shaping, and secured within the tunnel in separate pieces by seaming, welding or gluing.
  • the base 30 may be bonded or adhered to the surface of the tunnel by the use of suitable glues, vulcanizing agents or even by fasteners.
  • the liner 30 may be made of natural or synthetic materials such as rubber, elastomer plastic or their mixtures. -In some instances, the liner as a whole may bemade in part of one substance and in part of another substance.
  • the liner 30 may extend along any desired extent of the length of the tunnel from muzzle door 14 to shutter opening 18. Hence, the illustration of the liner 30 in FIG. 1, extending for the full length of the tunnel, shall not be limiting upon the scope of the invention.
  • the fingers 38 are trapezoidal or pyramidal forms tapering into aflat top. As seen in FIG. 1, the height of the figures is uniform from the breech door to a point indicated by arrow 39 approximately two-thirds the distance to the shutter opening 18 with a radius slightly larger than the missile, so as to provide a slight annular space around the missile.
  • the fingers 38 in each transverse successive row progressively increase in height, so that the liner tapers inwardly reducing the apparent cross-section of the tunnel, until a diameter D, substantially equal to that of the missile being ejected, is obtained.
  • Adjacent the outer shutter opening 18, the liner 30 terminates in an annular inwardly projecting ring 40 which lies in a plane parallel tothe plane of the shutter opening 18.
  • the ring 40 extends inward to the normal diameter D slightly less than the diameter of the missile to be ejected, so that it forms a flexible tight seal and compression ring about the missile as it exits. This tight seal acts as a sphinc-.
  • the sphincter providing a ring-like gland which constricts about the missile to close off the orifice created by the opening of the shutter 18.
  • the interior of the tunnel is sealed off from influence of the surrounding sea so that the accelerating water provided by the jets 16 will not be reduced in effect.
  • the sphincter insures that the ejecting missile centers itself uniformly with respect to the shutter opening, reducing its likelihood to hit the skin S.
  • the sphincter is arranged at right angles to the center line of the tunner rather than parallel to the elliptical shutter opening.
  • the liner as a whole and the sphincter ring 40 may be otherwise identical to that shown in FIG. 1.
  • the fingers 38 taper sharply inwardly adjacent ring 40.
  • the ring 40 itself is permanently curved and set to bend axially. inwardly of the tunnel to have a permanent bias against the direction of movement of the missile M (FIG. 2). During the movement of the missile out of the tunnel, it. is engaged by the ring 40 and causes the ring to deflect from its normally biased condition to that shown at 40a.
  • the slug of water driving the missile out of the inner tube will find less free area between missile and outer tube. It will then be worthwhile to continue to pump water after the tail portion of the missile begins to pass the breech door or muzzle of the inner tube, for less of the momentum of the water slug will be wasted by its flowing around the missile.
  • the water slug or jet can be made to exert a strong push on the missile during its passage through the outer tube. The missile can be accelerated over a longer distance, either permitting higher exit velocities or lower accelerations. This construction favors a centrifugal pump over a ram pump of limited stroke as a generator of the water slug.
  • the elastic, serrated inner surface of the outer tunnel will attenuate some of the acoustic transients generated by the water flow and by impact between missile and metal wall.
  • a liner as described above permits the employment of various sensors which measure displacement or pressure in selected fingers, so that if the missile strikes a specific section of the tunnel wall, those few fingers located in proximity to it will be easily and grossly displaced or subjected to unusual pressure by the impact.
  • the sensors may be arranged to send signals to a control system wired so that the location of each specific sensor is known and its output, when received, is used to opena specific valve at such a location that the hydraulic jet thus set in motion will produce a torque on the missile to reduce the intensity of contact or to remove the missile entirely from the wall.
  • the liner 30 is cut out with cup-like depressions 42, forming a mouth for each of the jets 16.
  • the mouth cutouts may be round, oval, or elliptical as necessary and for the particular function desired.
  • Mounted in selected fingers 38 are sensors 44 which monitor the stresses and/or strains produced by the moving missile.
  • the sensors 44 may comprise either strain gauges 44a, such as seen in FIG. 7, or pressure gauges 44b, as seen in FIG. 8. Each gauge is connected into a control circuit shown in FIG. 3 wherein the signal produced by the sensor is passed to a signal integrator and amplifier 48 from which it is passed to a high by-pass filter 50, and a threshold circuit 52 producing a signal activating a relay 54 associated with one or more selected servovalves 26 for the jets l6.
  • resistive strain gauges such as shown in FIG. 7 (which are most appropriate to this application because no voids need be left in the elastomer liner), and inductive strain gauges (which are highly useful for measuring displacements between a fixed surface and a portion of a moving body), can be found on pages 272 to 275, Electrical Measurements and Their Applications” by Walter C. Michels, D. Van Nostrand Co., Princeton, N.J., Copyright, 1957. by D. Van Nostrand Co. Inc. Such gauges are conventionally connected in AC. or DC. bridge circuits as shown in FIG. 4, page 679 Methods of Experimental Physics, Volume 2, Electrical Methods, edited by E. Bleuler and R. O. I-Iaxby, Academic Press, New York, and London, Copyright, 1964.
  • the pressure gauges of FIG. 8 can be used in place of strain gauges. These can be of the piezo-electric type, and could be placed between the elastomer liner and the steel tube. For dynamic measurements with such pressure gauges, various precautions are necessary in order to eliminate troublesome noise and drift problems. Solutions are well known. A high impedance circuit including an amplifier suitable for dealing with high frequency, dynamic inputs is described in a publication by Kistler Instrument Corporation, Clarence, N.Y., Model 566 Multi-Range Electrostatic Charge Amplifier," August, 1964. Such instrumentation is used, for example, on shock tubes.
  • Each gauge 44a is connected in or formed as a part of a control circuit, the details of which are illustrated in FIG. 3.
  • a plurality of sensors or gauges 44 may be utilized to operate a jet nozzle 16. In order to assure the proper operation of the jet nozzle 16, it is necessary to signal its relay 54 to operate servovalve 26.
  • FIG.'3 a plurality of valve operating sensors are shown. Many more sensors may be connected to the one relay 54 and valve 26 there shown. However, for convenience, only two such sensors are illustrated.
  • the circuit illustrated in FIG. 3 comprises an amplifier 48 which receives a signal from its respective sensor. Connected in line with the amplifier 48 is a by-pass filter 50 which insures that only high frequency signals, such as those due to impact of the missile against the sensor finger, wil actuate the servovalve. Slow deformations of the fingers, such as those caused by changes in pressure because of changes in depth of the submarine, will not actuate the servovalve because they will be primarily of low frequency, whereas contacts due to impact will be intense, of limited time duration, and will contain many high frequency components.
  • the use of alternating current and a high by-pass filter 50 results in a characteristic spike which will be absent when low frequency variations affect the fingers.
  • the threshold circuit 52 screens out the effects of minor noises and high frequency movements of the fingers, such as may occur from the turbulence associated with the high speed passage of a missile along an entirely normal trajectory that does not call for intervention by the countertorque jets.
  • signals generated only by large deflections of the fingers caused by impact will be able to reach relay 54.
  • the purpose of the by-pass filters 50 and the threshold circuits 52 is, therefore, to screen out not only noise. but also any but genuine signals due to impact between missile and fingers, preventing the valve operating relay 54 from responding to undesired forces or pressures.
  • the fingers 38 are cut away or eliminated in the area 42 of the countertorque jet ports to form the cup-like depressions in the vicinity of such jets.
  • These cup-like depressions are designed to enhance the countertorque jet action in a number of ways. They can act as part of the jet nozzle or port and help reduce undesirable rapid changes in flow velocity. More important, as a missile is deflected toward a jet port by exterior hydrodynamic forces, the jet flow from the port becomes trapped to a degree'and the pressure of the fluid flow at the jet against the side of the missile is increased, resulting in the centering of the missile within the tube.
  • the water is freer to flow annularly from the jet about the missile, creating an area of low pressure about the port and an area of increased pressure opposite the port, both of which cause the missile to right itself by moving into the lower pressure area.
  • FIGS. 4 and 5 illustrate a more accurate and powerful mode of operation.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates in perspective how the sensors can be theoretically arranged in a cylindrical array longitudinally and transversely of the tunnel in latitudes and meridians.
  • FIG. 5 the inside of the cylinder is developed onto a plane, with the sensors indicated by a matrix 1a, lb, 10 2a, 2b, 2c. 3a, 3b, and 3c.
  • the integers 1, 2, 3, etc. and the letters A, B, C indicate locations from aft forward in the tube-tunnel structure and can be referred to as meridians".
  • the subscripts a, b, 0, etc. and 1, 2, 3 indicate angular locations around the cylinder, and can be said to locate latitudes.
  • e is at or at the bottom of the tube.
  • sensors and ports There can be a denser distribution of sensors than ports. If more than one sensor is activated, integrating circuits will select that jet closest to the center of impact. Or, if the sensors are arranged on more latitudes than there are jets, these sensors will be wired to activate that jet closest in angular alignment to move the missile away from the wall.
  • the chosen jet will either be at essentially 180 away in latitude" than the activated sensor, or on essentially the same latitude, depending on whether the jet, when activated, will strike the missile before or after its center of gravity.
  • jet B would be actuated by sensor 2a.
  • the present design provides a self-compensating system in which the missile moves in a variable field-of fluid.
  • the operation of the sensors and fluid jets provide substantially instantaneous centering of the missile to keep it on course as it leaves the tube, resisting all gravity and external forces that might tend to divert or deflect the movement of the missile from its intended path.
  • the amplifier, filter and threshold circuit are combined in a preprogrammed computerized control module, which is capable of receiving signals from the various sensors, and integrating them with the known parameters of missile firing such as the force of the propelling slug, speed of the missile, ocean forces, distances, etc. and as a result, select the one or plural number of jets to operate.
  • the last series of jets 16 are positioned along the torpedo tunnel 10 at an angle to the axis of such tunnel, unlike the remaining jets 16 which are positioned substantially circumferentially about the tunnel.
  • the last series of such angled jets 16 are positioned as close to the terminal end of the tunnel and as close as possible to the opening 18 thereof so that they can impart forces to the torpedo or missile at the very last moment of exit of such torpedo from the tunnel, thereby assuring a most immediate, final and accurate control of the torpedo as it leaves the tunnel and even for a distance therebeyond.
  • the angled jets 16 here identified as 16a for convenience are directed toward the opening 18 of the tunnel l0 and, thus, apply their forces to the missile even as the missile is about to leave the tunnel and for a distance thereafter.
  • This arrangement assures a more accurate control of the torpedo even after it has left the confines of the tunnel.
  • a submarine missile launcher for a submarine having a propulsion tube and a tunnel connecting the interior propulsion tube and the exterior of the submarine comprising a circumferential resilient covering lining a lengthwise extent of the interior of said tunnel,
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 wherein said flexible means are fingers arranged in a matrix and said fingers flex in response to touching engagement therewith by the missile moving through said tunnel.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 2, said sensor means being operable in selected ones of said fingers to provide a signal of engagement by the missile moving through the tunnel,
  • said last named means being selectively operable in response to the selected operation of certain ones of said sensor means.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 2 wherein a flexible radially inwardly directed ring extends into said tunnel between the tunnel'and the missile being launched therefrom.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 4 wherein said matrix is arranged to taper radially in ward adjacent the exterior end of said tunnel.
  • a submarine missile launcher including a flexible radially inwardly directed ring in said tunnel, said ring having an inner diameter slightly smaller than the outer diameter of the missile adapted to be ejected therefrom.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring is flexibly biased in an axial direction.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially parallel to the exterior opening of said tunnel.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially normal to the axis of the tunnel.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said matrix of fingers defines a surface for engagement by a missile moving through said tunnel and for guiding the missile during its movement.
  • a submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 wherein at least certain of said jets are positioned within said tunnel to apply a lateral force to the missile after the same has exited from the tunnel.
  • a submarine launch tunnel having an inner end communicating with the propulsion tube and an outer end communicating with the ocean through which a missile is adapted to move in a path substantially aligned with the axis of the tunnel,
  • means in said tunnel and cooperating with the missile to seal said tunnel from said ocean including sensing means to sense the movements of the missile along its path and an annular flexible ring extending radially inwardly from the surface of said tunnel, said ring having an inner diameter normally less than said missile,
  • said lateral thrust applying means including means to apply lateral forces to the missile after the same has left the launch tunnel.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Ocean & Marine Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Aiming, Guidance, Guns With A Light Source, Armor, Camouflage, And Targets (AREA)

Abstract

In a submarine missile launching system a launch tunnel connecting the launching tube and the outer skin of the vessel through which the missile passes. The tunnel is provided with a liner, formed of a matrix of resilient finger-like inward projections separated by longitudinal and transverse grooves. The exit end of the matrix is provided with a radial inward seal ring adapted to flexibly engage the missile. The fingers are selectively provided with sensors monitoring the movement of the missile, which sensors control a hydraulic counter-torquing system regulating the ejection of the missile.

Description

United States Patent 1191 Cohen Dec. 31, 1974 SUBMARINE MISSILE LAUNCH SYSTEM Prima Examiner-Samuel W. En le 75 l t. P [Ch 1 C ,N.Y. g 1 men or 0 G Ove Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Bauer & Amer [73] Assignee: Subcom, Inc., Glen Cove, NY. 22 Filed: July 30, 1973 E b T I h n a su marlne 111185] e aunc mg system a aunc tun- [211 Appl' 383,586 nel connecting the launching tube and the outer skin of the vessel through whichthe missile passes. The 52 us. c1 89/l.8l, 89/l.8l6, 114/238 tunnel Provided with a formed of a matrix of 51 1111. C1 F4lf3/08 resilient finger-like inward Projections Separated y [58] Field 61 Search 14/238, 239; 89/].809, longitudinal and transverse groom- The exitend 39 3 3 L816 the matrix is provided with a radial inward seal ring adapted to flexibly engage the missile. The fingers are References Cited selectively provided with sensors monitoring the UNITED STATES PATENTS movement of the missile, which sensors control a hydraulic counter-torquing system regulating the'ejec- 3,072,022 .l/l963 Wood et al. 89/l.8l 3,132,562 5/1964 Frevel 89/8 x of the 3,289,533 12/1956 Brown 89/1810 21 Claims, 8 Drawing Figures PATENTEDBE83 1 I914 3.857. 32 1 saw m2 32m '44- 4a I I6 THRESHOLD AMPLIFIER FILTER CIRCUIT 45 E] o [3 o n 0 90 [3 o [:1 o 1:: 0 135 1:] o D o :1 O .80 3 0 O 225 C] o [:1 o [:1 Q
270 [:1 o E] 0 El 0 3|5 D o :1 o [:1 0
la A Zo 819L353 SUBMARINE MISSILE LAUNCH SYSTEM BACKGROUND or THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for launching projectiles, such as torpedos, from submarines and in particular to the construction and operation of the outer launch tunnel.
Submarines are conventionally formed with a pressure-tight hull surrounded by a skin or outer shield. Between the'skin and the hull, various ballast tanks, fuel tanks, etc. are stored, and the space is freely flooded by sea water so as not to require pressurization. The projectile is prepared and initially fired through a launch tube (torpedo tube) which breaches the pressurized hull but which terminates well before the outer skin shield. Between the muzzle end of the launch tube and the outer skin is a tunnel, generally of a larger diameter than the launch tube itself. The forward end of the tunnel is closed by a shutter which cuts across the tunnel so that, in the closed position, the shutter fairs into the lines of the hull. When the shutter is open, a more or less elliptical opening as large as or larger than the tunnel is revealed. The outer tunnels are in the free flooding portion of the submarine and are not subjected to large differential pressures. They are constructed of metal of a thickness to permit ease of handling and fabrication and for resistance to the shocks and vibrations of usage.
The distance from the muzzle of the inner launch tube to the shutter opening is generally shorter than the length of a projectile. Thus, the forward end of the weapon enters the ocean flowfield around the moving submarine before the aft end of the projectile clears the closer-fitting inner tube. Because of the hydrodynamic forces exerted by the flow field on the emerging projectile, and because the projectile is either positively or negatively buoyant, the missile is subjected to large torques, occasionally in more than one plane. Further, as soon as it is physically free to do so, the missile begins to rotate, that is, to pitch and/or yaw, and to translate along transverse axes as well as to move forward. The result is that the projectile frequently strikes some part of the tunnel or shutter opening before it is completely free of the submarine. Such impacts increase in severity with increasing submarine speed, and often result in great damage to the projectile or the submarine. The tunnel is, therefore, made larger in diameter than the inner launch tube so that small amounts of weapon rotation or translation do not result in contact.
One of the most widely used methods of ejecting the missile from the closely fitting launch tube is to generate a slug of water which enters the aft end of the launch tube and pushes the missile out as if it were a free piston. However, the missile frequently has a streamlined stern section. As the aft end of the weapon,
with its decreasing diameters, enters the muzzle opening, an annular space of increasing area is created and the water slug no longer can accelerate the missile. Most missiles slow down as they pas through the tunnel.
in applicants prior patent applications Ser. No. 64,479 filed Aug. 17, 1970, now abandoned, and Continuation-in-Part application Ser. No. 343,815 filed Mar. 22, 1973, it has been shown how the use of pressure water jets can create torques on'the missile that counter'those due to the external flow field, and how appropriate variation in the'exit velocity produced by jet streams acting on the missile can also reduce eliminate such contact.
While the techniques disclosed in the aforementioned applications reduce damage to the missile as well as the vessel, it does not entirely eliminate the problem, nor does it permit the more rapid ejection of the projectile than heretofore known.
It is theobject of the present invention to provide an improved method for passing and ejecting a missile or projectile such as a torpedo through the outer launch tube which overcomes the disadvantages and defects of the prior art.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an improved method of ejecting a missile through the outer launch tube which virtually eliminates the lateral motions incurred by differences in buoyancy, pressure or torque exerted on it and in which the possibility of the missile sticking or hanging up-in the launch tunnel or its exit shutter is eliminated.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an improved construction for the launch tunnel in which the above-mentioned disadvantages are eliminated.
It is a specific object of the present invention to provide a launch tunnel having-a liner which absorbs shock and which accurately guides the missile.
It is a further specific object of the present invention to provide a liner for a launch tunnel which may be combined with sensors detecting the movement and torque on the missile, which may then be translated into a signal actuating appropriate jet controls.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION According to the present invention, a system for control of the ejection of a submarine missile is-provided wherein the launch tunnel, between the inner. tube and the sea, is lined with an elastic resilient member or members adapted to absorb the strains and shocks and deflect the moving projectile. The liner comprises a matrix of radially extending fingers which are separated by longitudinal and annular transverse grooves to form a grid pattern of individually deflectable units. The liner may be formed as a unitary carpet-line structure vor of individual sections of finger projections secured to the surface of the launch tunnel in tubular fashion.
In combination with the resilient liner, the system may include a directional and force sensing arrangement coupled with a monitoring arrangement by which the direction, ejection force and torque on the missile may be regulated. This arrangement includes a plurality of sensors embedded within selected ones of the resilient fingers, and a plurality of hydraulic jet nozzles selectively supplied with pressurized liquid, which 'are activated in a programmed manner in response to the sensors to exert a regulating force on the missile.
The cylindrical lining of the launch tube, with a plurality of spaced deflecting fingers, provides a chamber in which the deflection of the missile, traveling at high speeds, can be dampened and absorbed. It also provides the means by which the sensors of the control and regulating system can be spaced at any selected point within the launch tunnel, considering the longitudinal as well as radial position of the missile with respect to any point in the tunnel. It further provides the hydraulic control and regulating system with a high degree of flexibility enabling the exercise of countertorquing forces on the missile in any programmed manner, taking clearly into account speed, position and force of the missile. Further, lining the tunnel with a resilient carpet of fingers reduces theannular space between the missile and tunnel wall in a manner to decrease destructive contact therebetween. The momentum of the slug of liquid, which accelerates in the tightly fitting inner launch tube 12, will be dissipated to a much lesser degree by escape through the annulus which is, in the present invention, materially reduced and restricted and of lesser free area than in prior art structures.
A further feature of the present invention lies in providing the outer or exit end of the cylindrical matrix of resilient fingers with a sphincter" like seal comprising an inwardly directed flexible ring extending above the height of the fingers, so as to have an inner diameter slightly smaller than the diameter of the missile being ejected. The ring engages the surface of the missile and thus, in combination with it, seals the exit end of the tunnel so that during ejection the interior of the launch tunnel is separated from the exterior ocean currents and forces. This seal prevents counter currents or ocean pressure forces from acting on the missile and separates the ocean pressure from acting on the slug of liquid propelling the missile from within the tube.
The use of the resilient lining of fingers reduces the annular area around the missile. This permits greater transfer of momentum from the ejection pulse to the missile while the latter tunnel l permits more efficient transer of energy from the ejection pulse to the missile. Thus, the ejection system can continue to operate effectively during the passage of the missle through the outer tube 10. This new capability permits a lower acceleration over a longer distance and can give higher exit velocities with less peak power in the ejection equipment and with lower acoustic transients.
Preferably, the portion of the matrix of fingers adjacent the sphincter opening is progressively tapered from the diameter of the tunnel liner to the diameter of the sphincter seal ring so that the missile is properly guided. The sphincter ring may be prestressed into a given bias and it may be arranged in any plane relative to the longitudinal axis of the tube.
Full details of the present invention are set forth in the following description and are depicted in the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a horizontal sectional view through a launch tube and launch tunnel employing the liner and sensor system of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a sectional view similar to FIG. 1 showing the outer end of a launch tunnel having a modified form of the invention;
FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram of the sensing and monitoring system employed in the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a perspective view indicating the arrangement of sensors and hydraulic jet ports for control of the missile;
FIG. 5 is a development of the arrangement shown in FIG. 4;
FIG. 6 is a sectional view taken along line 66' of FIG. 1;
FIG. 7 is an enlarged view of the portion encircled in FIG. 6 showing one form of sensor; and
FIG. 8 is a view similar to FIG. 7 showing a second form of sensor.
DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION Turning to FIG. 1, the present invention will be seen embodied within an otherwise conventional torpedo tunnel, generally depicted by the numeral 10, running from the torpedo launch tube 12 mounted in the body B of a submarine to the outer skin shield S in conventional manner. The body B and skin S are joined by not shown means to provide an area surrounding at least part of the submarine which is designed to freely flood with sea water. The launch tube 12 is provided with a muzzle door to allow the missile (not shown) to be ejected into the tunnel 10. The tunnel 10 is provided with a plurality of fluid jet inlets 16 for the introduction of countertorquing fluid, as water, intended to accelerate and correct the trajectory of the missile. The exterior of the tunnel is provided with a conventional shutter opening 18. The jets 16 are uniformly apportioned into a plurality of annular rows, spaced along the length of the tunnel. In general, the rows of jets are parallel to each other, and arranged transversely to the longitudinal axis of the tunnel, although certain rows may be set at an elliptical angle to the axis (preferably parallel to the plane of the shutter opening), to obtain as large a moment arm as is feasible on the accelerated missile. The fluid jets 16 in each row are connected individually by pipes 20 to common torroidal manifold 22, which is connected via a conduit 24 to a source of the counter-. torquing water. The same may be a reservoir, or the ocean, and includes pumping, pressure regulating and other means for its delivery. Interposed in each of the pipes 20 leading to the individual jets is solenoid operated valve 26 responsive to a control signal, in a manner later described.
The angle at which the jets themselves open in the surface of the tube, may be selected as desired to best meet the requirements set for operation of a particular torpedo under given parameters. Likewise, the number and spacing between jets and the rows ofjets may also be chosen as desired.
In general, the construction of the launch tube and tunnel is .described, and the operation of the jet assist is made of elastic material, such as natural or synthetic rubber, plastic or the like, and is provided over its entire surface area with longitudinal grooves 32 and transverse grooves 34 to provide an interior surface face 36 having a plurality of spaced inwardly projecting fingers 38. Preferably the liner 30 is made as a unitary molded carpet-like structure which may be seamed or welded together as a tube in situ. On the other hand, the fingerlike projection 38 can be individually formed as by molding, cutting or shaping, and secured within the tunnel in separate pieces by seaming, welding or gluing. The base 30 may be bonded or adhered to the surface of the tunnel by the use of suitable glues, vulcanizing agents or even by fasteners. The liner 30 may be made of natural or synthetic materials such as rubber, elastomer plastic or their mixtures. -In some instances, the liner as a whole may bemade in part of one substance and in part of another substance.
It has been found that the. best results are obtained with a liner having a degree of resiliency sufficient to absorb and dampen the shock of the missile passing through it and exiting from the shutter opening, but one which is not so soft as to inhibit the missiles freedom of movement and the speed of its passage and ejection. Accordingly, a uniformly dense elastomeric material is preferred, and one in which the fingers and base are not formed with any hollows or cavities, although with the proper choice of material the fingers can be hollow if desired.
The liner 30 may extend along any desired extent of the length of the tunnel from muzzle door 14 to shutter opening 18. Hence, the illustration of the liner 30 in FIG. 1, extending for the full length of the tunnel, shall not be limiting upon the scope of the invention. The fingers 38 are trapezoidal or pyramidal forms tapering into aflat top. As seen in FIG. 1, the height of the figures is uniform from the breech door to a point indicated by arrow 39 approximately two-thirds the distance to the shutter opening 18 with a radius slightly larger than the missile, so as to provide a slight annular space around the missile. From the point 39, the fingers 38 in each transverse successive row progressively increase in height, so that the liner tapers inwardly reducing the apparent cross-section of the tunnel, until a diameter D, substantially equal to that of the missile being ejected, is obtained. Adjacent the outer shutter opening 18, the liner 30 terminates in an annular inwardly projecting ring 40 which lies in a plane parallel tothe plane of the shutter opening 18. The ring 40 extends inward to the normal diameter D slightly less than the diameter of the missile to be ejected, so that it forms a flexible tight seal and compression ring about the missile as it exits. This tight seal acts as a sphinc-.
ter providing a ring-like gland which constricts about the missile to close off the orifice created by the opening of the shutter 18. Thus, the interior of the tunnel is sealed off from influence of the surrounding sea so that the accelerating water provided by the jets 16 will not be reduced in effect. Further, the sphincter insures that the ejecting missile centers itself uniformly with respect to the shutter opening, reducing its likelihood to hit the skin S.
In the embodiment of FIG. 2 the sphincter" is arranged at right angles to the center line of the tunner rather than parallel to the elliptical shutter opening. The liner as a whole and the sphincter ring 40 may be otherwise identical to that shown in FIG. 1. However, a very advantageous result is obtained when they are modified as per the showing of FIG. 2. Here, the fingers 38 taper sharply inwardly adjacent ring 40. The ring 40 itself is permanently curved and set to bend axially. inwardly of the tunnel to have a permanent bias against the direction of movement of the missile M (FIG. 2). During the movement of the missile out of the tunnel, it. is engaged by the ring 40 and causes the ring to deflect from its normally biased condition to that shown at 40a. When the missile leaves the tunnel, the ring returns to its normally biased condition. Thering 40 is thus required to be positively flexed in order to permit the missile to be ejected and, thus, a tight seal is obtained. The perpendicular arrangement shown in FIG. 2 simplifies the calculations relating to the sizes of the jets and the timing of the openings.
It will be obvious that a missile emerging from the inner launch tube and driven into some part of the outer tunnel or shutter opening will have the shock of contact reduced by the yielding fingers or ridges. These can. be displaced much more than can a smooth surface pressurized gas, the material becomes much stiffer than it was originally. Solid fingers or ridges of elastomer, each of which acts as a cantilever beam, can be given contours so that considerable control over the stressstrain curve is achievable, with said stress-strain curves essentially independent of depth;
The slug of water driving the missile out of the inner tube will find less free area between missile and outer tube. It will then be worthwhile to continue to pump water after the tail portion of the missile begins to pass the breech door or muzzle of the inner tube, for less of the momentum of the water slug will be wasted by its flowing around the missile. Thus, the water slug or jet can be made to exert a strong push on the missile during its passage through the outer tube. The missile can be accelerated over a longer distance, either permitting higher exit velocities or lower accelerations. This construction favors a centrifugal pump over a ram pump of limited stroke as a generator of the water slug.
The elastic, serrated inner surface of the outer tunnel will attenuate some of the acoustic transients generated by the water flow and by impact between missile and metal wall.
Lastly, the construction of a liner as described above permits the employment of various sensors which measure displacement or pressure in selected fingers, so that if the missile strikes a specific section of the tunnel wall, those few fingers located in proximity to it will be easily and grossly displaced or subjected to unusual pressure by the impact. The sensors may be arranged to send signals to a control system wired so that the location of each specific sensor is known and its output, when received, is used to opena specific valve at such a location that the hydraulic jet thus set in motion will produce a torque on the missile to reduce the intensity of contact or to remove the missile entirely from the wall.
The liner 30 is cut out with cup-like depressions 42, forming a mouth for each of the jets 16. The mouth cutouts may be round, oval, or elliptical as necessary and for the particular function desired. Mounted in selected fingers 38 are sensors 44 which monitor the stresses and/or strains produced by the moving missile.
The sensors 44 may comprise either strain gauges 44a, such as seen in FIG. 7, or pressure gauges 44b, as seen in FIG. 8. Each gauge is connected into a control circuit shown in FIG. 3 wherein the signal produced by the sensor is passed to a signal integrator and amplifier 48 from which it is passed to a high by-pass filter 50, and a threshold circuit 52 producing a signal activating a relay 54 associated with one or more selected servovalves 26 for the jets l6.
Appropriate sensors of conventional construction are disclosed in Standard Handbook for Mechanical Engineers", Baumeister and Marks, Seventh Edition, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Copyright 1958, 1967 by McGraw-Hill, particularly pages -78, 5-79, 5-8, 16-8, 16-10 and l611.
More detailed descriptions of resistive strain gauges, such as shown in FIG. 7 (which are most appropriate to this application because no voids need be left in the elastomer liner), and inductive strain gauges (which are highly useful for measuring displacements between a fixed surface and a portion of a moving body), can be found on pages 272 to 275, Electrical Measurements and Their Applications" by Walter C. Michels, D. Van Nostrand Co., Princeton, N.J., Copyright, 1957. by D. Van Nostrand Co. Inc. Such gauges are conventionally connected in AC. or DC. bridge circuits as shown in FIG. 4, page 679 Methods of Experimental Physics, Volume 2, Electrical Methods, edited by E. Bleuler and R. O. I-Iaxby, Academic Press, New York, and London, Copyright, 1964.
The pressure gauges of FIG. 8 can be used in place of strain gauges. These can be of the piezo-electric type, and could be placed between the elastomer liner and the steel tube. For dynamic measurements with such pressure gauges, various precautions are necessary in order to eliminate troublesome noise and drift problems. Solutions are well known. A high impedance circuit including an amplifier suitable for dealing with high frequency, dynamic inputs is described in a publication by Kistler Instrument Corporation, Clarence, N.Y., Model 566 Multi-Range Electrostatic Charge Amplifier," August, 1964. Such instrumentation is used, for example, on shock tubes.
Each gauge 44a is connected in or formed as a part of a control circuit, the details of which are illustrated in FIG. 3. A plurality of sensors or gauges 44 may be utilized to operate a jet nozzle 16. In order to assure the proper operation of the jet nozzle 16, it is necessary to signal its relay 54 to operate servovalve 26. In FIG.'3, a plurality of valve operating sensors are shown. Many more sensors may be connected to the one relay 54 and valve 26 there shown. However, for convenience, only two such sensors are illustrated.
The circuit illustrated in FIG. 3 comprises an amplifier 48 which receives a signal from its respective sensor. Connected in line with the amplifier 48 is a by-pass filter 50 which insures that only high frequency signals, such as those due to impact of the missile against the sensor finger, wil actuate the servovalve. Slow deformations of the fingers, such as those caused by changes in pressure because of changes in depth of the submarine, will not actuate the servovalve because they will be primarily of low frequency, whereas contacts due to impact will be intense, of limited time duration, and will contain many high frequency components. The use of alternating current and a high by-pass filter 50 results in a characteristic spike which will be absent when low frequency variations affect the fingers.
The threshold circuit 52 screens out the effects of minor noises and high frequency movements of the fingers, such as may occur from the turbulence associated with the high speed passage of a missile along an entirely normal trajectory that does not call for intervention by the countertorque jets. By use of a proper setting of the threshold circuit 52, signals generated only by large deflections of the fingers caused by impact will be able to reach relay 54. The purpose of the by-pass filters 50 and the threshold circuits 52 is, therefore, to screen out not only noise. but also any but genuine signals due to impact between missile and fingers, preventing the valve operating relay 54 from responding to undesired forces or pressures.
The specific amplifier by-pass filter and threshold circuit employed in the present disclosure form no part of the present invention. The circuit is merely illustrated and described to enable one to understand the complete operation of the present invention. Such structural details are well known in the art and any one or more conventional amplifiers, by-pass filters and threshold circuits may be employed.
As illustrated in FIG. 1, the fingers 38 are cut away or eliminated in the area 42 of the countertorque jet ports to form the cup-like depressions in the vicinity of such jets. These cup-like depressions are designed to enhance the countertorque jet action in a number of ways. They can act as part of the jet nozzle or port and help reduce undesirable rapid changes in flow velocity. More important, as a missile is deflected toward a jet port by exterior hydrodynamic forces, the jet flow from the port becomes trapped to a degree'and the pressure of the fluid flow at the jet against the side of the missile is increased, resulting in the centering of the missile within the tube. Conversely, if the missile swerves away from a jet, the water is freer to flow annularly from the jet about the missile, creating an area of low pressure about the port and an area of increased pressure opposite the port, both of which cause the missile to right itself by moving into the lower pressure area.
The clearance between the outer surface of the missile and the adjacent surfaces of the elastic yieldable fingers when the missile is centered in the tube enhances the proper operation and ensures the smooth movement of the missile through the tube. Although simultaneous opening of all the jet ports positioned about the circumference of the tube will tend to center the missile, a more accurate and powerful mode of operation is illustrated by FIGS. 4 and 5. FIG. 4 illustrates in perspective how the sensors can be theoretically arranged in a cylindrical array longitudinally and transversely of the tunnel in latitudes and meridians. In FIG. 5, the inside of the cylinder is developed onto a plane, with the sensors indicated by a matrix 1a, lb, 10 2a, 2b, 2c. 3a, 3b, and 3c. etc., and the jets indicated by A, B, C, etc. The integers 1, 2, 3, etc. and the letters A, B, C, indicate locations from aft forward in the tube-tunnel structure and can be referred to as meridians". The subscripts a, b, 0, etc. and 1, 2, 3 indicate angular locations around the cylinder, and can be said to locate latitudes. Thus, in the matrix illustrated, e is at or at the bottom of the tube.
It is not required that there be a one-to-one correspondence between sensors and ports. There can be a denser distribution of sensors than ports. If more than one sensor is activated, integrating circuits will select that jet closest to the center of impact. Or, if the sensors are arranged on more latitudes than there are jets, these sensors will be wired to activate that jet closest in angular alignment to move the missile away from the wall.
The chosen jet will either be at essentially 180 away in latitude" than the activated sensor, or on essentially the same latitude, depending on whether the jet, when activated, will strike the missile before or after its center of gravity.
' Determination of where the jet will strike the missile depends on the geometry of the sensor-jet nozzle arrangement and on the delay between the time the missile hits a sensor and the time the jet contacts the missile, Quick acting valves can be emloyed which can be fully opened in as little as or milliseconds. However, the inertia of the water in the manifolds and nozzles will create as great or greater delays. If the total delay from actuation of sensor to impact of jet is 50 milliseconds (0.050 seconds), and the missile is moving at 40 feet per second, it will have moved two feet before the jet begins to affect missile rotation. Submarine launched missiles are of many sizes,-but characteristically will be about 20 feet or more in length.
By taking into account both the distances between sensors and jets and the delays, prior computations based on a particular launcher design will reveal where, relative to the center of gravity, the jets will strike the missile after a particular sensor is struck.
If the impact occurs early in the launch and the outer tube is long, or if the jet must be activated to relieve bending of the missile while much of it is still in the tight-fitting launch tube, jets close to the tunnel opening will likely operate on the missile forward of its center of gravity. The impacted sensor will actuate a jet valve 180 away from it in latitude". Thus, in FIG. 5, if the missile hits sensor 1e, it will actuate, through the appropriate amplifier, filter, and threshold circuit relay 54, a related valve 26 controlling the related jet in the B meridian.
If the impact occurs so far forward that the jets cannot strike themissile forward of its center of gravity, then the portto be opened should be on or near the same latitude as the sensor which is struck. As an example of such a case, jet B would be actuated by sensor 2a.
The present design provides a self-compensating system in which the missile moves in a variable field-of fluid. The operation of the sensors and fluid jets provide substantially instantaneous centering of the missile to keep it on course as it leaves the tube, resisting all gravity and external forces that might tend to divert or deflect the movement of the missile from its intended path. Operatively, the amplifier, filter and threshold circuit are combined in a preprogrammed computerized control module, which is capable of receiving signals from the various sensors, and integrating them with the known parameters of missile firing such as the force of the propelling slug, speed of the missile, ocean forces, distances, etc. and as a result, select the one or plural number of jets to operate.
Various modifications, changes and embodiments have been shown, since it is intended that the present disclosure be illustrative only of the invention. Reference should be made to the accompanying claims only for the limitations of the scope of the invention.
Referring to the embodiment of FIG. 1, it will be noted that the last series of jets 16 are positioned along the torpedo tunnel 10 at an angle to the axis of such tunnel, unlike the remaining jets 16 which are positioned substantially circumferentially about the tunnel. The last series of such angled jets 16 are positioned as close to the terminal end of the tunnel and as close as possible to the opening 18 thereof so that they can impart forces to the torpedo or missile at the very last moment of exit of such torpedo from the tunnel, thereby assuring a most immediate, final and accurate control of the torpedo as it leaves the tunnel and even for a distance therebeyond. Thus, the angled jets 16 here identified as 16a for convenience are directed toward the opening 18 of the tunnel l0 and, thus, apply their forces to the missile even as the missile is about to leave the tunnel and for a distance thereafter. This arrangement assures a more accurate control of the torpedo even after it has left the confines of the tunnel.
What is claimed is:
1. A submarine missile launcher for a submarine having a propulsion tube and a tunnel connecting the interior propulsion tube and the exterior of the submarine comprising a circumferential resilient covering lining a lengthwise extent of the interior of said tunnel,
flexible means projecting to extend from said covering radially inwardly toward the tunnel axis for engagement with a missile being launched 'from said tunnel, a plurality of fluid dispensing jets relatively spaced about the tunnel, 4
and sensor means connected with-said jets and responsive to the flexing of said flexible means during the movement of a missile through the tunnel to cause said jets to apply a stream of fluid laterally to the missile.
2. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 wherein said flexible means are fingers arranged in a matrix and said fingers flex in response to touching engagement therewith by the missile moving through said tunnel.
3. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 2, said sensor means being operable in selected ones of said fingers to provide a signal of engagement by the missile moving through the tunnel,
means for controlling the flow of fluid through selected ones of said jets,
and said last named means being selectively operable in response to the selected operation of certain ones of said sensor means.
4. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 2 wherein a flexible radially inwardly directed ring extends into said tunnel between the tunnel'and the missile being launched therefrom.
5. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 4 wherein said matrix is arranged to taper radially in ward adjacent the exterior end of said tunnel.
6. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 including a flexible radially inwardly directed ring in said tunnel, said ring having an inner diameter slightly smaller than the outer diameter of the missile adapted to be ejected therefrom.
7. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring is flexibly biased in an axial direction.
8. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially parallel to the exterior opening of said tunnel.
9. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially normal to the axis of the tunnel.
10. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said matrix of fingers defines a surface for engagement by a missile moving through said tunnel and for guiding the missile during its movement.
11. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 wherein at least certain of said jets are positioned within said tunnel to apply a lateral force to the missile after the same has exited from the tunnel.
12. In the control of a missile along a given path of I movement through the launch tunnel of a submarine,
lining at least a portion of said launch tunnel with a resilient covering that is displaceable in response to deviations of the missile from its given path during a launch thereof,
including within said covering sensors to signal deviations of the missile when the missile moves from its given path,
and means operable in response to the signals of said sensors to cause a stream of fluid to be applied laterally against the missile to cause the missile to move back along its given path.
13. In the control of a missile according to claim 12 wherein said stream of fluid is directed through a plurality of jets,
and selected ones of said jets being associated with selected ones of said sensors.
14. In the control of a missile according to claim 13 2 wherein selected ones of said jets apply a stream of fluid against the missile after the same has left the confines of said launch tunnel.
15. In a submarine launch tunnel having an inner end communicating with the propulsion tube and an outer end communicating with the ocean through which a missile is adapted to move in a path substantially aligned with the axis of the tunnel,
means in said tunnel and cooperating with the missile to seal said tunnel from said ocean including sensing means to sense the movements of the missile along its path and an annular flexible ring extending radially inwardly from the surface of said tunnel, said ring having an inner diameter normally less than said missile,
and means in said tunnel to apply a lateral force to the missile in response to movements of the'same from its path as sensed by said sensing means.
16. The launch tunnel according to claim 15 wherein said ring is biased axially inward counter to the direction of movement of said missile.
17. The launch tunnel according to claim 15 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially parallel with the edge of the outer opening.
18. The launch tunnel according to claim 15 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the tunnel.
19. The launch tunnel according to claim 15, said lateral thrust applying means including means to apply lateral forces to the missile after the same has left the launch tunnel.
20. The method of controlling the movement of a missile along a given path during its launch from a submarine tunnel wherein the tunnel has sensing means displaceable in response to deviations of the missile 0 from its given path the method comprising sensing deviations of the missile from its given path of movement as it moves along the launch tunnel and into displaceable engagement with the sensing means,
and applying a stream of fluid laterally against the missile in response to the sensed deviations to counter the deviated movement of the missile to cause the same to assume its given path.
21. The method as in claim 20,
sensing the deviations of movement of the missile from along its given path as it leaves the submarine tunnel,
and applying a countering stream of fluid against the missile after it leaves the tunnel.

Claims (21)

1. A submarine missile launcher for a submarine having a propulsion tube and a tunnel connecting the interior propulsion tube and the exterior of the submarine comprising a circumferential resilient covering lining a lengthwise extent of the interior of said tunnel, flexible means projecting to extend from said covering radially inwardly toward the tunnel axis for engagement with a missile being launched from said tunnel, a plurality of fluid dispensing jets relatively spaced about the tunnel, and sensor means connected with said jets and responsive to the flexing of said flexible means during the movement of a missile through the tunnel to cause said jets to apply a stream of fluid laterally to the missile.
2. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 wherein said flexible means are fingers arranged in a matrix and said fingers flex in response to touching engagement therewith by the missile moving through said tunnel.
3. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 2, said sensor means being operable in selected ones of said fingers to provide a signal of engagement by the missile moving through the tunnel, means for controlling the flow of fluid through selected ones of said jets, and said last named means being selectively operable in response to the selected operation of certain ones of said sensor means.
4. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 2 wherein a flexible radially inwardly directed ring extends into said tunnel between the tunnel and the missile being launched therefrom.
5. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 4 wherein said matrix is arranged to taper radially inward adjacent the exterior end of said tunnel.
6. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 including a flexible radially inwardly directed ring in said tunnel, said ring having an inner diameter slightly smaller than the outer diameter of the missile adapted to be ejected therefrom.
7. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring is flexibly biased in an axial direction.
8. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially parallel to the exterior opening of said tunnel.
9. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially normal to the axis of the tunnel.
10. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 6 wherein said matrix of fingers defines a surface for engagement by a missile moving through said tunnel and for guiding the missile during its movement.
11. A submarine missile launcher according to claim 1 wherein at least certain of said jets are positioned within said tunnel to apply a laTeral force to the missile after the same has exited from the tunnel.
12. In the control of a missile along a given path of movement through the launch tunnel of a submarine, lining at least a portion of said launch tunnel with a resilient covering that is displaceable in response to deviations of the missile from its given path during a launch thereof, including within said covering sensors to signal deviations of the missile when the missile moves from its given path, and means operable in response to the signals of said sensors to cause a stream of fluid to be applied laterally against the missile to cause the missile to move back along its given path.
13. In the control of a missile according to claim 12 wherein said stream of fluid is directed through a plurality of jets, and selected ones of said jets being associated with selected ones of said sensors.
14. In the control of a missile according to claim 13 wherein selected ones of said jets apply a stream of fluid against the missile after the same has left the confines of said launch tunnel.
15. In a submarine launch tunnel having an inner end communicating with the propulsion tube and an outer end communicating with the ocean through which a missile is adapted to move in a path substantially aligned with the axis of the tunnel, means in said tunnel and cooperating with the missile to seal said tunnel from said ocean including sensing means to sense the movements of the missile along its path and an annular flexible ring extending radially inwardly from the surface of said tunnel, said ring having an inner diameter normally less than said missile, and means in said tunnel to apply a lateral force to the missile in response to movements of the same from its path as sensed by said sensing means.
16. The launch tunnel according to claim 15 wherein said ring is biased axially inward counter to the direction of movement of said missile.
17. The launch tunnel according to claim 15 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially parallel with the edge of the outer opening.
18. The launch tunnel according to claim 15 wherein said ring lies in a plane substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the tunnel.
19. The launch tunnel according to claim 15, said lateral thrust applying means including means to apply lateral forces to the missile after the same has left the launch tunnel.
20. The method of controlling the movement of a missile along a given path during its launch from a submarine tunnel wherein the tunnel has sensing means displaceable in response to deviations of the missile from its given path the method comprising sensing deviations of the missile from its given path of movement as it moves along the launch tunnel and into displaceable engagement with the sensing means, and applying a stream of fluid laterally against the missile in response to the sensed deviations to counter the deviated movement of the missile to cause the same to assume its given path.
21. The method as in claim 20, sensing the deviations of movement of the missile from along its given path as it leaves the submarine tunnel, and applying a countering stream of fluid against the missile after it leaves the tunnel.
US00383586A 1973-07-30 1973-07-30 Submarine missile launch system Expired - Lifetime US3857321A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00383586A US3857321A (en) 1973-07-30 1973-07-30 Submarine missile launch system

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00383586A US3857321A (en) 1973-07-30 1973-07-30 Submarine missile launch system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3857321A true US3857321A (en) 1974-12-31

Family

ID=23513802

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00383586A Expired - Lifetime US3857321A (en) 1973-07-30 1973-07-30 Submarine missile launch system

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3857321A (en)

Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4344592A (en) * 1977-11-10 1982-08-17 Spiridon Constantinescu Launching tower for heavy rockets
US4357855A (en) * 1980-12-01 1982-11-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Radiation resistant projectile canister liner
US4399999A (en) * 1982-04-08 1983-08-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Segmented annular seal for missle launch tube
US4406211A (en) * 1981-07-28 1983-09-27 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Annular shock absorbing system for a missile launcher
US4464972A (en) * 1983-03-15 1984-08-14 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Lateral support system for canister-launched missile
US4480522A (en) * 1981-10-15 1984-11-06 General Dynamics, Pomona Division Rocket exhaust-gas deflector
US4492143A (en) * 1983-05-31 1985-01-08 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Anti-rotation mass support system particularly for missile support
US4602552A (en) * 1984-06-25 1986-07-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Zero adhesion system
US4604940A (en) * 1985-02-28 1986-08-12 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Highly resilient polyurethane elastomer
US4627327A (en) * 1985-06-03 1986-12-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Hybrid unitized shock and vibration mitigation system
US4646617A (en) * 1985-08-30 1987-03-03 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Shock absorbing support pad system
US4739691A (en) * 1987-02-19 1988-04-26 Morton Thiokol, Inc. Method of and apparatus for loading/unloading a large missile into/from a horizontally positioned canister
US5003909A (en) * 1990-06-18 1991-04-02 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Submarine torpedo tube collapsible choke
US5220125A (en) * 1985-01-18 1993-06-15 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Unitized shock isolation and missile support system
US5315912A (en) * 1984-05-11 1994-05-31 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Suspended hoop seal
US5322002A (en) * 1993-04-30 1994-06-21 Thiokol Corporation Tube launched weapon system
US5353677A (en) * 1993-08-31 1994-10-11 Westinghouse Electric Corporation Shock isolation system
US5400689A (en) * 1993-02-16 1995-03-28 Deutsche Aerospace Device for storing a missle in a launcher tube
US5438905A (en) * 1984-06-19 1995-08-08 Westinghouse Electric Corporation Method and apparatus for stabilizing the in-tube trajectory of a missile
US5438906A (en) * 1984-08-13 1995-08-08 Westinghouse Electric Corporation Unitized shock absorbing pad with looped fiber ring
US6330866B1 (en) * 1998-05-22 2001-12-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Missile support and alignment assembly
US6584924B2 (en) * 2001-02-13 2003-07-01 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Apparatus for controlling pressure recovery
US6871610B1 (en) * 2003-06-06 2005-03-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Assembly for launching bodies from an underwater platform
US7128013B1 (en) * 2005-09-26 2006-10-31 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Launch tube system having inflatable bladder shock isolation
FR2991764A1 (en) * 2012-06-11 2013-12-13 Dcns NAVAL PLATFORM EQUIPPED WITH DEVICES FOR LAUNCHING UNDERWATER VEHICLES
CN103940291A (en) * 2014-04-09 2014-07-23 北京航天发射技术研究所 High-rigidity light launching box
US20220099408A1 (en) * 2020-02-27 2022-03-31 Mirza Faizan Deep sea pressure based projectile launching system

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3072022A (en) * 1961-10-30 1963-01-08 Davis M Wood Missile container suspension system
US3132562A (en) * 1961-05-16 1964-05-12 Dow Chemical Co Launching system for rocket driven devices
US3289533A (en) * 1965-04-06 1966-12-06 Charles R Brown Missile launching tube seal

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3132562A (en) * 1961-05-16 1964-05-12 Dow Chemical Co Launching system for rocket driven devices
US3072022A (en) * 1961-10-30 1963-01-08 Davis M Wood Missile container suspension system
US3289533A (en) * 1965-04-06 1966-12-06 Charles R Brown Missile launching tube seal

Cited By (30)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4344592A (en) * 1977-11-10 1982-08-17 Spiridon Constantinescu Launching tower for heavy rockets
US4357855A (en) * 1980-12-01 1982-11-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Radiation resistant projectile canister liner
US4406211A (en) * 1981-07-28 1983-09-27 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Annular shock absorbing system for a missile launcher
US4480522A (en) * 1981-10-15 1984-11-06 General Dynamics, Pomona Division Rocket exhaust-gas deflector
US4399999A (en) * 1982-04-08 1983-08-23 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Segmented annular seal for missle launch tube
US4464972A (en) * 1983-03-15 1984-08-14 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Lateral support system for canister-launched missile
US4492143A (en) * 1983-05-31 1985-01-08 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Anti-rotation mass support system particularly for missile support
US5315912A (en) * 1984-05-11 1994-05-31 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Suspended hoop seal
US5438905A (en) * 1984-06-19 1995-08-08 Westinghouse Electric Corporation Method and apparatus for stabilizing the in-tube trajectory of a missile
US4602552A (en) * 1984-06-25 1986-07-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force Zero adhesion system
US5438906A (en) * 1984-08-13 1995-08-08 Westinghouse Electric Corporation Unitized shock absorbing pad with looped fiber ring
US5220125A (en) * 1985-01-18 1993-06-15 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Unitized shock isolation and missile support system
US4604940A (en) * 1985-02-28 1986-08-12 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Highly resilient polyurethane elastomer
US4627327A (en) * 1985-06-03 1986-12-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Hybrid unitized shock and vibration mitigation system
US4646617A (en) * 1985-08-30 1987-03-03 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Shock absorbing support pad system
US4739691A (en) * 1987-02-19 1988-04-26 Morton Thiokol, Inc. Method of and apparatus for loading/unloading a large missile into/from a horizontally positioned canister
US5003909A (en) * 1990-06-18 1991-04-02 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Submarine torpedo tube collapsible choke
US5400689A (en) * 1993-02-16 1995-03-28 Deutsche Aerospace Device for storing a missle in a launcher tube
US5322002A (en) * 1993-04-30 1994-06-21 Thiokol Corporation Tube launched weapon system
US5353677A (en) * 1993-08-31 1994-10-11 Westinghouse Electric Corporation Shock isolation system
US6330866B1 (en) * 1998-05-22 2001-12-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Missile support and alignment assembly
US6382072B1 (en) * 1998-05-22 2002-05-07 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Support and alignment assembly
US6584924B2 (en) * 2001-02-13 2003-07-01 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Apparatus for controlling pressure recovery
US6871610B1 (en) * 2003-06-06 2005-03-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Assembly for launching bodies from an underwater platform
US7128013B1 (en) * 2005-09-26 2006-10-31 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Launch tube system having inflatable bladder shock isolation
FR2991764A1 (en) * 2012-06-11 2013-12-13 Dcns NAVAL PLATFORM EQUIPPED WITH DEVICES FOR LAUNCHING UNDERWATER VEHICLES
WO2013186103A1 (en) 2012-06-11 2013-12-19 Dcns Naval platform provided with devices for launching underwater vehicles
CN103940291A (en) * 2014-04-09 2014-07-23 北京航天发射技术研究所 High-rigidity light launching box
US20220099408A1 (en) * 2020-02-27 2022-03-31 Mirza Faizan Deep sea pressure based projectile launching system
US11959725B2 (en) * 2020-02-27 2024-04-16 Mirza Faizan Deep sea pressure based projectile launching system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3857321A (en) Submarine missile launch system
US3791303A (en) Deterrent ammunition
US4932306A (en) Method and apparatus for launching a projectile at hypersonic velocity
KR870000748B1 (en) Undersea weapon
US4625646A (en) Aerial missile having multiple submissiles with individual control of submissible ejection
US6668699B2 (en) Porous nozzle projectile barrel
US5099745A (en) Apparatus and method for designing a specially ported torpedo launching system to damp a seawater piston
CA2164293A1 (en) Precision shooting aerodynamic non-spherical safety-oriented projectile
US3295411A (en) Deep submergence missile launching vehicle with hovering and missile ejecting systems
US2989899A (en) Missile launcher air eject system-power plant and control system
KR101597632B1 (en) Ultra high speed guided torpedo
EP0152099A2 (en) Method and apparatus for converting an air gun into a hydro gun for marine seismic impulse generation
CA1145621A (en) Hydropulse underwater propulsion system
CN105371710A (en) Guided-missile high-speed water entering method based on reverse gas injection
US3940981A (en) Projectile recovery system with quick opening valves
KR102465457B1 (en) Apparatus and method for launching weapon using bilge pump
US3749317A (en) Thrust vector control system
US2837971A (en) Hydraulic ejection equipment for missiles
US3075301A (en) Launch and underwater trajectory test vehicle
US3210937A (en) Thrust control apparatus
NO300826B1 (en) airgun
US5277144A (en) Valve assembly for submarine balanced ejection system
US5050523A (en) Pivoted vehicle launch for submarine
SU858580A3 (en) Device for generating acoustic impulses in liquid medium
US3120709A (en) Surface launch test vehicle