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A200 LCAW torpedo

A200 LCAW
TypeMiniature torpedo
Place of originItaly
Service history
Used byItaly, Germany, Norway
Production history
ManufacturerLeonardo
Produced1992-present
VariantsA200, A200/A, A200/N, A202
Specifications
Mass11.3 to 16 kg or greater
Length883 mm to >2 m
Diameter123.8 mm

WarheadPBX shaped charge
Warhead weight2.5 kg
Detonation
mechanism
Impact or proximity

EngineContra-rotating direct-drive brushless electric motor
PropellantSilver-zinc battery
Operational
range
A200: 700 m (2,300 ft)
A200/A: 2 km (1.1 nmi)
A200/N: 8 km (4.3 nmi)
Maximum depth≥300 m (980 ft)
Maximum speed 18 kn (33 km/h)
Guidance
system
Acoustic homing
Launch
platform
Aerial, surface, submarine

A200 LCAW (Low Cost Antisubmarine Weapon) is a miniature torpedo developed by Whitehead Alenia Sistemi Subacquei S.p.A. (WASS).

Description

The LCAW is a miniature active-sonar homing torpedo originally developed to assist in the classification of targets. In order to deal with a potentially hostile submarine target, either a depth charge or a torpedo would be launched at it, either to kill it or cause it to flee, thus confirming it as a hostile submarine. With the obsolescence of conventional depth charges and the high cost of homing torpedoes, an intermediate solution was developed.[1] The LCAW is intended to fill the gap between conventional depth charge and torpedoes, in the area where depth charges lack propulsion and guidance, while the cost of conventional torpedoes is increasingly becoming prohibitive. The program initially began in 1987, and was completed in 1992. In 1993, the weapon was adopted by Germany and Norway for their low cost antisubmarine weaponry program when the LCAW proved to meet the German and Norwegian requirement of a maximal underwater attack range of 500 m from the point of entry into the water. Norway subsequently developed its own upgraded variant.

In addition to regular deployment, LCAW is also used by Italian naval special forces. The air-dropped version is deployed from NATO standard size A aerial sonobuoy dispensers; moving aircraft can deploy it from an altitude between 45–600 m (148–1,969 ft) and at aircraft speeds of 50–200 kn (93–370 km/h), and helicopters can additionally deploy it while hovering at altitudes of as little as 15 m (49 ft).[2] This allows a single ASW aircraft to carry a considerable number of units. The weapon is primarily designed to engage targets in shallow water, especially midget submarines, diver propulsion vehicles, human torpedoes, sabotage or espionage-related equipment hauled by frogmen, and other hostile entities engaged in underwater special operations.

In 2014, an improved version of the LCAW was presented at the Euronaval 2014 trade show, titled "Black Scorpion".[3] The Black Scorpion became available in 2021.[4]

Variant

All of LCAW variants share the same operating depth, from 15 to 300 meters, and the same diameter, 123.8 mm. The same 2.5 kg PBX shaped charge warhead is adopted by air-launched variants while a tandem charge is shared by surface-launched variants. At least five variants have been developed, including:[2]

  • A200: The basic version, 883.4 mm long, weighing 12 kg, with a range of 700 to 1000 meters at 17 kt. Endurance is limited to 2 minutes. An improved version increased speed to 18 kt.
  • A200/P: A practice variant of the A200, which incorporates an acoustic pinger and inflatable bag system for recovery, an onboard non-volatile data acquisition system, and a synchronized acoustic transmitter which allows the torpedo to be tracked on a 3D tracking range during exercises.
  • A200/A: An air-launched variant, 914.4 mm long, weighing 12.5 kg. Has a rotary air stabilizer. Maximum range of 2 km at 18 kt.
  • A200/N: A heavy version for launch by surface ships, 2036 mm long, weighing 32.7 kg, with a range of 8 km at 18 kt, with a stated 70% to 85% probability of hitting a hostile submarine traveling at 8 knots. The ship-launched configuration can also be equipped with a low-cost rocket booster.
  • A202: A 16 kg variant for use by frogmen, launched from a man-portable launcher called Medusa, first adopted by the Italian naval special forces.

Operators

 Italy
 Germany
 Norway

See also

References

  1. ^ Friedman, Norman (1991). The Naval Institute Guide to World Naval Weapon Systems, 1991/92. United States Naval Institute. p. 698. ISBN 0-87021-288-5.
  2. ^ a b Watts, Anthony (1997). Jane's Underwater Warfare Systems, 1997/98. Jane's Information Group. p. 204. ISBN 0-7106-1561-2.
  3. ^ Peruzzi, Luca. "Leonardo's Black Scorpion mini-torpedo is on track to complete qualification for delivery to customers". European Defence Review. Retrieved 30 September 2024.
  4. ^ "Black Scorpion". electronics.leonardo.com. Retrieved 30 September 2024.