Camden Fort Meagher 1887-1905
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- Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
- / vbbsmyt . Camden Fort at Cork held one of the secret Brennan torpedo stations between 1887 and 1905 and was one of only 2 stations to have 2 launch ramps, such was the importance of the harbour at Cork. This animation shows the installation, based on original drawings, and was produced in collaboration with Norma O'Connor for her MA in Digital Arts 2018. You can support my animations here: / vbbsmyt . Animation created using Cinema 4D. Music credits are shown at the end of the movie.
Not just wire-guided, but wire-powered! Fascinating
Unreal.
What a great breakdown of some "bigger" machinery... absolutely fantastic... and the engineering that went into those early torpedoes!
Hello there I watch your videos
@@Kriegloaf itoo
Never knew such a thing existed. Have to thank Ian McCollum for sending me here.
alot of steam, much steel, alot of wire, fair bit of clockwork, some explosives and a measured pinch of bicycle chain.
I do wonder how quickly they could get it into operation though, looks like it's quite a job sending one out.
These torpedo stations were hidden in cliffs or forts. When there was a high risk, the boilers would be lit but damped down, so ,could probably be ready at 10 mins notice. From cold probably 30-40 mins, but attacking ships could only make 12-15 knots in 1900
In tests on the Thames, the Brennan torpedo was found to be effective. Towed barges were used as targets.
An outstanding clockwork mechanism, and I find relly funny how they used two key for the storage of what I assume being the arming system like in more modern nuclear icbm launching silos
The depth mechanism was top secret, and to this day no one really knows how it worked. The X-ray shots I ,have seen are inconclusive
A bit late, but at least US ICBM silos actually require 4 keys to consent for a launch. Same as on US SSBN boats which also require 4 keys for to launch. Can't say for certain about other countries.
@@vbbsmyt oh I thought those were batteries at first, lol
@@Melanie16040 Land silos need two IIRC, at least in the Titan days.
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial They require 4. You're thinking of a single LCC with the two person crew each turning one key. Thing is that's not everything that has to happen to consent to a launch. Each LCC commands 10 missiles and there's a total of 5 LCC's per squadron. A second LCC is also needed to consent to the launch, so keys 3 and 4.
The amount of time to put this animation video of a horizontal steampunk icbm missile base must of been enormous . Impressive indeed.
Man, this makes me think. When the first torpedo tubes on ships rolled out, did people think that was amazing technology, considering they had to do all this for sending out one torpedo?
In a way... though all this technology is actually replaced by modern _guidance_ systems more then propulsion. The real brilliance of the brennen torpedo is that it can be remote controlled by varying the tug rate between the two wires, which turned a differential between the spools, which turned the rudder. An operator would direct the torpedo to the ship from a watch tower. Compact tube -launched torpedos already existed at the time, but they were unguided and would remain unguided for many decades to come.
So yes, the advance of technology is enormous. An entire hillside of equipment eventually replaced by a few microphones and a microchip that could all be stuffed in a duffle bag!
@@cerebralm a microship that fits in a duffel bag - clearly you're talking about the Russian one! :) on a plus side, it can be powered with mains power or diesel fuel or a few strong words, and cooled with vodka. But seriously, modern torpedo autonomous guidance systems are far from perfect if the target is a modern sub.
@@AlexKarasev I was referring to the whole guidance package, and my only reference is very old blueprints of the first autonomous passive-sonar guided torpedos. I'm sure it's all been a lot more miniaturized since then. My point was just that modern guidance systems are much more advanced then a guy watching the target from a tower on land and adjusting a setting on a steam engine.
@@cerebralm I understand & was kidding. Advanced - I don't have any torpedo stats (enemy hit vs self/friendly hit vs miss). Little birdie is telling me those stats, to the extent they exist, are worse than ugly. And soon all sides will be adding AI to the mix, affected by hacking or malicious code insertion at fabrication time. So I wouldn't be so quick dismissing the guy watching the target.
@@AlexKarasev Of course, if you're shooting at something you can see, and your enemy can't see and attack the spotter. If you want to attack over the horizon or long distances underwater, the use of technology is non-negotiable. And it helps to keep spotters out of harm's way. The earliest systems were awful, I understand a lot of early torpedos had a nasty habit of getting stuck at a constant cornering rate... which of course brought them around a big circle to kill the very vessel that launched them. But there are a lot of situations where you have no choice but to trust sensor systems since humans simply don't have the senses to detect what's going on.
Your animations really are very good. You show how these quite complicated pieces of engineering work at a level of understanding to a layman. Well done!!
I'm still not 100% sure my brain parses the "we pull the wire out of the back of the torpedo to make it go forward" thing, but very cool
I was wondering the same thing. I think pulling the wire causes the spool to turn. Given an appropriate gearing to drive the prop, I guess the propulsion would be enough to overcome the backwards pull of the wire. Seems kind of ineffecient, but i guess it was the best that the technology of the time had to offer. Still trying to figure out the guidance though.
@@MarkDHastingsMusic Guidance comes from reeling in two wires at different speeds.
Considering the primary power source was steam engine at the time, the design was genius! Also the station is controlling a narrow straight, the range requirement is low.
one of those wonderfully baroque victorian technologies.
Victorian era? Yes. Baroque? no.
It's Baroque?
Why? did you bareak it?
@Cw Sayre Baroque Hussein Obama😏😏😏
This is insanely good. You've really outdone yourself with this one!
Excellent! Oscarsborg Fortress next, and a visualization of how they sunk the Blücher?
They had torpedo launchers not dissimilar to those found on naval destroyers at the time, which means that the loading process was much simpler. These torpedoes were also probably either oxygen or battery powered, making them a bit simpler than the torpedo shown in this video.
@@abercrombieblovs2042 It would still be interesting. Few people know that land-based torpedo launchers even existed. I surely didn't until I read about the Battle of Drobak for the first time.
Amazes me they haven’t restored this part of the Fort to show the Torpedo facility. It’s an interesting bit of history
Place is in bits down there, Very little of the actual Machinery there
Jules Verne could not have conceived of something better. Classic Victorian ingenuity
Неплохо как для необразованных первобытных. А очередной раз убеждаюсь как была развита цивилизация в былые времена, а сейчас сплошная диградация
Fantastic!! A lot of work to make this presentation. The technology at this time was amazing.
Вот откуда Григорий Адамов брал мысли для "Тайны двух океанов".
Amazing. So this is the early form of Wire guidance in torpedo.
Dhimas: Absolutely. In 1887, the Brennan was faster, carried a larger warhead and had greater range than the automotive 'fish' torpedoes of the time. Plus you could steer it to intercept an evading target. However, improvements in torpedo design soon outclassed it. Rob
ok this is epic
Berlin Flakturm (AA Tower) next?
Bill Wilson that would be awesome
You need to send detailed blueprints of this gun to him then
This is great! I wish you included the special binoculars with the guidance system, though. I cant find much info on them.
Narration would be nice so we could learn what's going on
I believe that is the first "wire guided" munition. With the rod poking above the surface also made it a TOW guided munition. I wonder, did sailors on these ships understand the incoming destruction about to be visited upon them when they saw those rods coming at them?
The British were very secretive about the Brennan. The actual mechanism that controlled depth was a closely guarded secret (and today no-one knows exactly how it worked). The Torpedo stations were hidden in cliffs or forts, so it is likely that enemy’s had little knowledge of Brennan defences. Yes, the spray from the steering mast could be seen by the target, but they would only have a couple of minutes to spot the spray, report it to the bridge, decide it was a threat and then try to evade. But the torpedo could be steered to counter any course changes. There were a few earlier prototype torpedo designs that could be steered, but the Brennan WAS the first operational guided weapon (with over 20 years of service).
Many many thanks for sharing this .
Having been in the torpedo room in Camden many times when I was a kid I always wondered how it worked .
Now I know.👍
Conjures images of Jules Verne.
Lose the horrendous music dude!
What program are you using to model and animate all this? It looks really good, and id love to play with the software myself :)
*And then he clicked on the video description where it usually is to be found*
There was a same operation station in Hong Kong. The operation look very complicated
How the frick did they manage to design that without a cad program?😳
Design is less of a problem than getting right idea.
Many, many, *many* layers of blueprints.
A tour de force. It brings to light all those silent buildings I've visited over the years. Well done
Hello good afternoon thank you for being beautiful the wonderful and you is beautiful the greatness in you is beautiful I hope you have a great day. Good night
This takes a lot of time . But still he is not earning anything from youtube i guess. No ads were shown. May be On educational purpose ... very great work
Spectacular! And Fascinating!
this is cool, nice clear breakdown.
These whitehead torpedoes sunk a german cruiser in WW2, the fortress that fired them was written off as obsolete prior to this
These are Brennan torpedoes, wire guided, not like Whitehead torpedoes, which were aimed and fired froma ship or submarine using calculations froma mechanical computer or a set of log tables.
@@michaelbevan3285 The Whitehead was also powered by a compressed air reciprocating engine.
Hong Kong has dis
@Lung Chen
According to a booklet I have on these devices the Hong Kong version used hydraulic power (as in water hydraulics) to drive the propulsion/steering winches. This was apparently done because of the tropical climate, to remove the intense heat sources in the form of the steam generating gear, and also the hilly topography suited building an elevated reservoir to give an adequate hydraulic gradient. The launch stations were of course at near sea level.
Rube Goldberg would be awestruck! I personally, have no clue what I have just watched!
Could you elaborate on the steering mechanism? With the torpedo under way why were they spoiling up the wire? Also is the controller moving the pulleys or changing the speed each wire is wound up?
OK - propulsion: the wires are wound on drums in the torpedo which are connected to propellers. As the wires are pulled off, the drums rotate and power the torpedo forward. Search for vbbsmyt video on Brennan.
Steering: in the torpedo the wires pass around pulley wheels connected to Brennan's secret steering mechanism, which is probably a differential gear box. Now if more wire is pulled from the left drum than the right the differential shaft rotates, so moving the rudder and torpedo alters course. In the shore engine room when the red and green pulley wheels move apart, the one going forwards pulls extra wire and the one moving back pulls less. Again, my Brennan torpedo video my help to show this. Rob
I find it rather interesting that the more 'secure' part of the weapon (I can't remember if that was the steering kit I'd have to watch the other video on the torp) is kept in a double lock safe similar to what the missileers use for their 'go to war safe' and of course the dual keys needed to launch.
There used to be a Brennan Torpedo in the Royal Engineers Museum at Chatham. I don't know where it is now. These were operated by Royal Engineers as it was a shore installation.
It was replaced eventually by command operated minefields which were used to defend harbours and access points..
The only surviving Brennan is still in the RE Museum in Chatham. Actually, the Brennan was introduced to replace controlled minefields, since these took a long time to deploy in times of tension, and the electric cabling was expensive and tended to loose insulation. A Brennan station could be brought online online from cold in less than 30 minutes, but as shown in the animations, the Cornish boilers coud be lit then damped down so were available at very short notice. Plus you could fire Brenans for training and practice as often as you liked (they were reusable so long as a detonator was not fitted).
@@vbbsmyt You are of course correct! I knew the Brennen and the command minefields were connected, but got it the wrong way round.. senior moment!
Brennan was a prolific inventor.. he designed a flywheel driven monorail system that was quite widely used on building sites as it would run on lengths of standard gas pipe!
Glad to hear the Brennan is still at Chatham.. a lot of military museums have closed in recent times! I have been in the Brennan station at Lie Yue Mun Fort in Hong Kong. They have some reproduction torpedoes, but none of the original infrastructure remains apart from a few fixtures.
I can see you are interested in mechanisms.. have you ever seen the books about Machine Gun design by George Chinn..? I have a set.. fantastic illustrations (much copied!)
Нет слов :))))
Gold box is an analog computer for guidance?
It is the Depth unit - the mechanism that keeps the torpedo on depth. It was one of Brennan's Secrets, so secret that Depth Units were kept in a safe with 2 keys, held by different officers and only installed just before launching. To this day no-one knows how it worked. The X-rays that were made several years ago are of no real use.
This is a great demonstration of the mechanics, and I love the epic music over it
Amazing that some Kapitän zur See von Stolp hasn't downthumbed the video yet :D
Good
Could you do a video on the browning m2 or the fn c1?
Fab Video, Was in these rooms yesterday so has shed some light on what went on there.
Very good
Is this open to the Public (post Covid) as I only live 1 hour from Cork, would love to see this?
Thanks for the video.
The Fort is not open at the moment. www.camdenfortmeagher.ie
However, the Brennan Torpedo station, shown in the animation, is a complete wreck, and is not open to the public. You can explore the current station with this link:
www.brennantorpedo.com/
Офигенная анимация, спасибо!
Как ЭТИМ воевать?
Пока раскачегарят котлы, пока протянут все тросы... Любой нормальный корабль разберет из артиллерии всю эту машинерию!
1:58 those keys just wanted to stay there i guess
Used for dockyard and harbour defence from a prepared postion particularly where there were narrows. One at Sheerness dockyard protecting Chatham dockyard and the Thames estuary.
It is counter-intuitive to me. It doesn't seem like it should work. I feel like the torpedos should be dragged back.
Ko thấy lô rích gì cả
It is strange that not until hey captured german torpedoes at ww2, they finally made something proper. Most torpedoes up to mid ww2 were pretty shitty.
There had been a bunch of coal dust on the floor i guess and messy surrounding water also.
The cable spool was confusing.
The way it was animated.
Thank you for this !!
That look like the one in Hong Kong
Yes, there was a Brennan torpedo station in Hong Kong.
Almost got a Thunderbird sequence feel.
this is amazing, thank you so much for making these videos
Camden Fort is worth a visit if you are ever in the area of Cork, Ireland, and like this kind of thing.
Can we make a joke with this and never quitting wired earbuds?
Wait, did they actually steer those torpedoes mechanically? As in pull left wire to go left, rather than with electrical-signal?
Yes, although it is ‘pull the left wire faster than the right wire” the differential gear in the torpedo detects the different wire speeds and turns the rudder. When both wires are being pulled at the same speed, the rudder is central. Remember this mechanical design is over 120 years old. No electrics, no computers.
@@vbbsmyt Fascinating! Thank you for taking the time to explain!
Incredible engineering.... Nice solutions for everything
Nice. But slow
Jesus christ...i wouldn't have even bothered building that thing.
If it's that complicated, it's far far from perfected and some things will surely fix that issue soon enough
So it was the case, as this whole thing became outdated very quickly
It is not complicated, instead relied on the known technology of the time. When introduced it was faster, had a greater range and carried a larger warhead than contemporary mobile torpedoes, and it could be steered after firing. It was needed to protect major military ports and 8 such stations were completed around the world. However, as you have pointed out with 20-20 hindsight, technology advanced very rapidly in the late 19th century, and the Brennan was a dead end. Please edit your language.
What in the Sam hill
Did not understand how the torpedo did work, even then I did see it, have to look it up on wiki "It was propelled by two contra-rotating propellors that were spun by rapidly pulling out wires from drums wound inside the torpedo." that was a loot of clever engenering, wounder if they did get a aceptebel reliability on this things.
Great work of the animator.
JR. You will get a better explanation from my earlier video on the Brennan ruclips.net/video/XeyJbgrE8oc/видео.html. Yes it was reliable, much more than other locomotive torpedoes of the time since the Brennan could be steered, while Whitehead-type torpedoes would often veer off course.
I'm just wondering if any ship was ever sunk by one of these land based torpedoes.
For a demonstration, the hulk 'Monarch' was towed past a fort and demolished by a Brennan, and one small fishing boat sunk during a practise firing (presumably by the mast). That was it.
Imagine high-speed-wires under tension running over some eyelets and pulleys. A single flaw in manufacturing would send the wires whipping through a cramped room full of explosives, live steam and people. The Victorians really didn't mess around with half-measures and safe working environments.
this is 1890
not 1600
That was really overly complicated
Crazy, is it ever been used in actual combat?
No, the French would not oblige!
Similar station was built in Hong Kong during same era . Same fate it didn't fight its intended enemy.
In 1940 the Norwegian torpedo fort sank a German heavy cruiser in Oslofjord.
@@DavidOfWhitehills Pretty sure that was a more modern torpedo and launcher.
@@abercrombieblovs2042 Nope, the torps dated from 1900. The Battle of Drobak Sound.
I do like the decidedly French shape of the target.
kill count?
Now that I think about it, how would they get the torpedoes reserve replenished after they launched them all? I noticed no tunnels to get new torpedoes in the launching bay.
Briseur: The clue is in the last scene. When torpedoes are fired for practice, they are recovered and hoisted onto a trolley on the wharf, and then wheeled through the right hand tunnel into the storage area. New torpedoes are embarked in the same way. Interestingly, as you cannot remove the warhead due to the linkages passing through, torpedoes fired for practise have the full 220 pounds of wet gun cotton in place - but not the detonator or primer/gain. Rob
There is a railway system that it shows in the beginning and the end of the video. It's for torpedo replenishment, am I right?
I like it but.. im waiting for your video on MG42 or BREN GUN
A superb explanation of the weapon. Thank you.
Perdón mi ignorancia.Pero el torpedo,es un tipo de torpedo filoguiado?.Saludos desde Argentina.
The torpedo can be steered by pulling one wire or the other at a different speed, which causes a differential gear to rotate the rudders. The controller on shore watches the spray from the torpedo mast and directs it to hit the target.
I would have thought the wire tension would lift the rear of the torpedo.
Is this the type that Norway used to sink a German ship in WW2
No. Those were Whitehead torpedoes.
How effective was any of this ?
Did the building/torp system shown here ever get successful hits?
There was never a war against Britain while this system was operational. In testing, the Torpedoes could reportedly hit a floating fruit basket reliably at 2,000 yards. Since the torpedo could be steered, hitting moving and even maneuvering targets was pretty simple.
Steampunk torpedo
amazing engineering!
That took a while.
But how does the spinning wire propelled this?
ruclips.net/video/sQJCOnyUvfU/видео.html
@@vbbsmyt thanks a lot, sir!
So complex. What was the advantage over a shore battery of naval guns?
Gerry: If you want to fill a ship with air - use guns (or bombs). However, if you want to fill it with water - use torpedoes or mines, to misquote someone. In the late 19th Century, the entrances to military or strategic ports were protected by controlled minefields. These were mine laid at precise locations which could be command detonated when an enemy ship passed over, or contact mine fuzes could be activated by an electric current. The trouble was, defensive minefields took a long time to lay and the cable insulation at the time would not last very long underwater. So a torpedo station, with weapons easily maintained, controllable and ready for action at short notice were a significant advance. Shore batteries were useful but not as effective since the attackers would be armoured and would also be firing back. Sorry for previous response - I must be getting confused in my old age. Rob
Very intresting. Thanks
What is the driving force of the torpedo? And what is the benefit of the back wires?
The wires are pulled by the winch in the fort, which spills the reels in the torpedo, which turn the propellers. Each wire/drum turns one propeller, spinning in opposite directions. The wires also turn the inputs to a differential gear, which outputs the difference in the inputs, which is connected to the rudders for steering. So by pulling one wire faster than the other, you can control the path of the torpedo.
I still don't now how it was driven and how it was directed onto target !
My earlier video on Brennan may help ruclips.net/video/XeyJbgrE8oc/видео.html
Looks nice but i don't get how this works.
Watch my earlier video on the Brennan: ruclips.net/video/XeyJbgrE8oc/видео.html
Is the torpedo supplied with compressed air along the path
No
oh.....that clears things up
That was great! Fantastic!
Very clear!
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Awesome video, I always wondered how these were actually launched.
Were those essentially 'wire guided' torpedoes or is the movement of the directional vanes related to the gyroscope?
The Brennan was powered and steered by pulling wires from on-board drums. There was no gyro. Instead pulling more wire from one drum than the other operates a differential gear, causing it to rotate and so operate the rudder. I have a more detailed animation of the Brennan:
ruclips.net/video/sQJCOnyUvfU/видео.html
I hope this helps explain the device.
@@vbbsmyt ooooh
Uaauuuu
Amazing.
So ein Aufwand..