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Report - - RNTR Arrochar torpedo Testing Site..Scotland, July 2024 | Military Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - RNTR Arrochar torpedo Testing Site..Scotland, July 2024

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Mikeymutt

28DL Regular User
Regular User
This is a place you would not normally bother with, but the setting with it sitting on Loch Long with the mountains surrounding it is stunning. The old torpedo base is in a very ruinous state and had several fires. The site was far more extensive until they demolished large swathes of it. The place is now a haven for fishermen who regularly frequent it. This was an impromptu visit as I was out with the other half. We had driven up to the rest and be thankful for the views and we were booked in for lunch on Loch Lomond. We had an hour to kill and we were driving past and the girlfriend suggested stopping for another look. I went eight years ago on my first visit, and she has been several times. It’s a nice relaxed wander and the weather was lovely. As it was impromptu I did not have my camera so all phone shots.

History from Mooksters report.

The Loch Long Torpedo Range operated on the loch from 1912 to 1986. The abandoned Admiralty buildings, pier, and slipway remained on the west shore of the loch, opposite the village of Arrochar, until 2007, when demolition of the site began, and it was also subject to destruction by fire.
Originally an Admiralty facility, the range became the Royal Naval Torpedo Testing Station and Range, later referred to as both the Loch Long Torpedo Range, and the Arrochar Torpedo Range.
Activity at the range reached a peak during World War II, with more than 12,000 torpedoes being fired down the loch in 1944.

A line of floating targets was moored in the loch, in line with the pier, forming a series of observation platforms. Torpedoes under test were intended to run under these targets, rather than strike them, to check that they were running straight and true. Testing is said to have included wire-guided torpedoes which spooled out a control wire as they ran, but locals tell of regular misses, and of test subjects occasionally leaving the water. It is clear that some test samples were lost or abandoned, as the rusting remains of a battery powered torpedo lay on the shore south of Ardgarten for many years.
Torpedoes under test were constructed without warheads, and designed to float to the surface on completion of their test run. Recovery is said to have been by an ex-RAF rescue craft, the Fulmar, which had a low freeboard (the distance from the waterline to the upper deck level, measured at the lowest point where water can enter) which made the operation easier. During the period 1945-1946, several launches designated "Torpedo Recovery Vessel" were moored in the vicinity of the pier.

Testing ended after an explosion at another range, involving the same torpedo type then being evaluated at Loch Long, but was not the sole reason for the range's closure. The range, together with its surroundings, was best suited to straight-running, shallow depth torpedoes, and the increasing use of more advanced designs, capable of running deeper, and using wire guidance to home in on a target, meant it was no longer able to test the latest designs, and was closed.

The view to the testing station from across the loch in Arrochar.

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Lots of narrow gauge rails run through it.

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The view stood at the end.

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Loys of fishermen/women on the jetty.

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mookster

grumpy sod
Regular User
It may be little more than a ruin but it's got the most spectacular backdrop to any location I've been to, I love it.
 
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