torpedo tube
Noun: A torpedo tube is a cylindrical, tube-like structure, typically mounted on a naval vessel or submarine near its waterline. Its primary function is to serve as the launching mechanism for a torpedo, a self-propelled underwater missile. The tube houses the torpedo, provides initial aiming direction, and uses a burst of compressed air or an impulse charge to eject the weapon into the water, after which the torpedo's own propulsion system engages.
The term "torpedo tube" is used specifically to describe the physical launching apparatus on warships. It is a technical term from naval warfare and engineering.
Examples: * The submarine captain ordered the crew to load a Mark 48 torpedo into the forward torpedo tube. * Modern destroyers are often equipped with torpedo tubes for anti-submarine warfare. * The malfunction in the torpedo tube's firing mechanism prevented the weapon from launching.
- "Flood the torpedo tube": A preparatory command in naval operations meaning to fill the tube with seawater to equalize pressure before opening the outer door for firing or loading.
- "Tube-launched": An adjective used to describe a torpedo that is designed to be fired from a torpedo tube, as opposed to being dropped from an aircraft.
- Torpedo launcher: A more general term that can sometimes be used synonymously with "torpedo tube," though it may also refer to other launching systems.
- Launch tube: A broader term for any tube-based launching system, which can include torpedo tubes or missile silos.
- Launch tube (in a naval context)
- Firing tube
- "Broke the seal": Naval slang referring to the first operational firing from a newly installed or refurbished torpedo tube.
- "Tube shot": A term for a torpedo that has been fired from a tube.
- a tube near the waterline of a vessel through which a torpedo is fired