IN THE 1920S AND 30S, AIRCRAFT DESIGNER ANDREY TUPOLEV DESIGNED A
SERIES OF ADVANCED TORPEDO BOATS FOR THE USSR. SUPERBLY ILLUSTRATED,
THIS IS THEIR FIRST HISTORY IN ENGLISH.
The Soviet Navy's fast attack craft were inspired by the 1919
Kronstadt raid, conducted by British hydroplaning, torpedo-armed
Coastal Motor Boats (CMBs). The first were to be CMB copies, but with
Soviet shipbuilding incapable of the project, it was handed to the
Aerodynamic Institute, headed by Andrey Tupolev. Built with aircraft
engines and technology, his 50kt boats were as photogenic as they were
bumpy and noisy, and made a vivid impression on propaganda newsreels.
Some were adapted with remote control guidance, a pioneering
development of the naval drone.
Written by a former Soviet naval architect, this book is the first in
English to offer a history of these fascinating, dashing craft. He
explains that, technically advanced but flawed, the _Sh-4_ and _G-5_
had no opportunity to act in their designated role in World War II.
Instead, some were employed instead as landing craft, while others
were rearmed and used as minelayers or subchasers. Many were adapted
as fire support craft with Katyusha rocket launchers installed.
Packed with superb new artwork and unpublished photos, it examines
Tupolev's torpedo boats as well as the handful of other MTBs the
Soviet Union fielded. It is an account of a rare impressive design in
the prewar Soviet Navy.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472866585
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter