Anti-Invasion Floating Mortar

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Also known as Naysmyth's Submarine Mortar and the Steam Ram, the Anti-Invasion Floating Hammer was a semi-submerged naval ship design conceived and published by inventor James Nasmyth in 1853.[1] The mortar had a length of 80 feet and a beam of 30 feet and was equipped with a small steam engine that drove a single propeller. The walls of the mortar were 10 feet thick, protecting it against potential enemy gunfire of that period.[2] At the front of the boat was a hollow brass cap shaped like a ram that was 9 feet thick. Inside the ram was a case filled with a heavy charge of explosive powder. With only the funnel and a domed structure covering the pilot being visible above water, the mortar sought to attack enemy ships by ramming the hull with the explosive-filled ram. Because of potential dangers associated with its means of attack, the Anti-Invasion Floating Mortar was never built.

See also

References

  1. Smiles, Samuel, ed., James Nasmyth Engineer: An Autobiography. John Murray, 1912
  2. Jackson, G. Gibbard. The Romance of the Submarine. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1930.