Method and apparatus for retrieving an unmanned underwater vehicle

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6600695
  • Patent Number
    6,600,695
  • Date Filed
    Monday, August 19, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, July 29, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
A system and method is disclosed for retrieving an untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV in which the untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV may be retrieved through the torpedo tube of a submarine. The untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV has a capture cable extending therefrom with a transducer to produce a homing signal. A tethered homing signal seeking UUV is guided toward the homing signal. Capture arms on the tethered homing signal seeking UUV engage the capture cable and guide the capture cable to one of several cable snagging eye-members. The winching cable is then winched back into the torpedo tube thereby drawing the untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV into the torpedo tube.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




(1) Field of the Invention




The present invention relates generally to retrieving an unmanned underwater vehicle and, more specifically, to apparatus and method for connecting to and retrieving an unmanned underwater vehicle through a torpedo tube of a submarine.




(2) Description of the Prior Art




Unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) may be used for numerous military and non-military purposes including surveillance either stationary or trailing, monitoring various types of sea traffic, monitoring animal and plant life, mapping, weapon systems, and the like, depending on the UUV instrumentation, sensor arrays and the like. In some cases, it will be desirable to retrieve the UUV to obtain stored intelligence, to update equipment, perform maintenance, and program for new missions. Although the UUV may be recovered by ship, it may also be desirable to recover the UUV by means of a submarine whereby the retrieval and recovery may be made entirely underwater.




Relatively complicated apparatus have been used in the past as discussed below to recover vehicles through the torpedo tube of a submarine including multiple pistons, sleeves, electrical connections and the like. It would be desirable to simplify such a procedure. As well, it would be desirable to provide a cable connection to the UUV rather than a male-female connection which may be more difficult to effect. Other patents listed below also provide information about UUVs and interconnection to a trailing cable but not for winching purposes.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,115, issued Sep. 5, 1995, to P. E. Moody, which is incorporated herein by reference, discloses an unmanned underwater vehicle recovery device being joinable with the breech of an existing torpedo tube. The recovery device comprises a plurality of concentric tubes which telescope through the torpedo tube to the exterior of the hull of a submarine to provide a mechanism for aligning the recovered unmanned underwater vehicle with the torpedo tube launchway. A recovery vehicle is held within the recovery device by a deployable tether. During recovery, the recovery vehicle is launched from the recovery device in the torpedo tube of the submarine. The recovery vehicle travels out and mates with a coupling at the rear of the unmanned underwater vehicle. The tether is retracted and the joined recovery vehicle/unmanned underwater vehicle is pulled into the torpedo tube launchway. The concentric tubes are retracted and the unmanned underwater vehicle is left in the torpedo tube.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,398,636, issued Mar. 21, 1995, to C. F. Hillenbrand, which is incorporated herein by reference, discloses a submarine that trails a fiber optic cable and an undersea vehicle that is controlled by the cable. A missile/torpedo trails a second cable that is to be coupled to the first cable. The second cable has a segment suspended vertically underwater between a buoyant pod and a sea anchor type buoy. The undersea vehicle, or Autonomous Undersea Vehicle (AUV), hunts for the pod by conventional homing components, and the cable capturing arms on the vehicle direct the cable's movement relative to the vehicle into a pod mating position that achieves optical coupling of the two cables. In one embodiment, two arms are pivotally mounted to the vehicle's sides so one arm captures the suspended cable segment directing it into a slot so a male socket in the underside of the pod mates with a female socket in the slot. Another embodiment accomplishes the same result with a device in which the arms are formed at offshoots of a forked cable pickup device in the noise of the AUV. However, in the area of the mechanism which affects the final bringing of the AUV into a directly coupled and mated position with the pod, the patentee's descriptions are indefinite, vague, and regarding certain points baffling, even including the possibility of extraction of information from his graphics. Providing the mechanical solutions for bringing a pod hunting UUV into a connected relationship with the pod via a cable trailing therefrom is difficult. The efforts of the patentee further involved a requirement to optically couple two fiber optic link terminals at the pod UUV interface, which further complicates the solution. The present invention overcomes these problems and is a solution in which the complication of coupling the fiber links is eliminated.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,396,859, issued Mar. 14, 1995, to Hillenbrand et al., which is incorporated herein by reference, discloses another embodiment of the device described above in U.S. Pat. No. 5,398,636.




U.S. Pat. No. 5,291,194, issued Mar. 1, 1994, to G. H. Ames, which is incorporated herein by reference, discloses an apparatus for interconnecting an unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) and a free-floating pod. The apparatus comprises a communications cable extending between the pod and a less buoyant buoy, the buoy being in communication with a distal station, a mobile UUV in communication with a control vessel, connector structure on the UUV adapted to intercept the cable and adapted to slide along the cable toward the pod, and complementary engagement structure on the UUV and the pod adapted to cause the UUV to engage the pod in a preselected orientation and azimuth, to place the control vessel in communication with the distal station.




U.S. Pat. No. 3,757,722, issued Sep. 11, 1973, to R. L. Seiple, discloses a docking system that employs a haul down winch to recover and secure a swimmer delivery vehicle to the deck of a large submarine. A buoyancy system is used to deploy a haul down line in a vertical position extending above the submarine vehicle. An acoustic pulse transmitter provides guidance signals to direct the small swimmer delivery submersible to a point of engagement with the haul down line. An attachment means is secured to the line and cooperates with a capture socket carried on the nose of the submersible vehicle. A line capture and guidance device is also mounted on the nose of the submersible swimmer delivery vehicle to assist in attaching the vehicle to the haul down line.




In summary, while the prior art shows various systems relating to UUVs, the prior art does not provide a simplified system for attaching a cable to a UUV for winching the UUV aboard through a UUV receive tube, such as a torpedo tube of a submarine. Consequently, there remains a need for a system that may be used to connect with a trailing cable of a UUV for winching of the UUV into the torpedo tube. As an option, it would be desirable that the system provide for full use of the torpedo tube with virtually no modifications to the torpedo tube. Those skilled in the art will appreciate the present invention that addresses the above and other problems.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved method and apparatus for retrieving a UUV.




It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a means for attaching to a trailing cable of a UUV for hauling the UUV aboard a submarine.




These and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the drawings, the descriptions given herein, and the appended claims.




In accordance with the present invention, a method is provided for retrieving an untethered submarine tube-retrievable unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV). The untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV has a capture cable extending therefrom. The capture cable has attached thereto, intermediate the first UUV and the capture cable's trailing end, a sender transducer unit for producing a homing beacon signal. The sender transducer unit may be housed in a pod which additionally serves the purpose of being a first mechanical jam. The capture cable further has attached at its trailing end an element for exerting a cable extending force on the capture cable. This element may serve as a second mechanical jam. The method may comprise one or more steps such as, for instance, attaching a winching cable to a tethered homing signal seeking unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), launching the tethered homing signal seeking UUV from a UUV retrieve tube of a submarine. A winching cable towed by the tethered homing signal seeking UUV is guided to and physically secured, but not necessarily electrically or optically connected, to the capture cable. Other steps may comprise providing one or more capture arms that extend laterally from the tethered homing signal seeking UUV to form one or more respective apexes between the capture arms and a body of the tethered homing signal seeking UUV. In a preferred embodiment, a cable snagging eye-member is provided at each of the one or more apex. Each cable snagging eye-member has formed therein an eye-opening preferably of sufficient cross-sectional size to allow the cable snagging eye-member to freely slide along the capture cable when the capture cable is snagged therein. Other steps may comprise impinging a capture arm against the capture cable to guide the capture cable to a respective apex and into a snagged condition within the eye-opening of the cable snagging eye-member. The untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV is retrieved by pulling the winching cable to slide the cable snagging eye-member along the capture cable until the capture cable engages the first mechanical jam or the second mechanical jam. Continued pulling hauls the untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV into the UUV retrieve tube of the submarine.




In a preferred embodiment, the sender transducer unit and the force exerting element at the trailing end of the capture cable singly and collectively present substantially less inertial and drag resistance to a force to move them through water than an inertial and drag resistance which the untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV presents, whereby the cable snagging eye-member will always slide along the capture cable toward the first mechanical jam or the second mechanical jam.




Other method steps may comprise providing a split in the winching cable with first and second ends, attaching the first end to a first cable snagging eye-member, and attaching the second end to a second cable snagging eye-member. In one preferred embodiment, the first and second cable snagging eye-members are detachable from the tethered homing signal seeking UUV.




The invention also provides a system for retrieving an untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV, which may comprise one or more elements such as the submarine UUV retrieve tube, a capture cable trailing from the untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV carrying a homing signal beacon, a tethered homing signal seeking UUV carrying a receiver transducer for receiving the homing beacon signal to guide the tethered homing signal seeking UUV toward the homing beacon signal and the capture cable, and a winching cable secured to the tethered homing signal seeking UUV and extendable through the UUV retrieve tube. A plurality of extendable capture arms are mounted to the tethered homing signal seeking UUV for engaging the capture cable, and a plurality of cable snagging eye-members mounted at respective apexes of the capture arms.




In one preferred embodiment, the plurality of cable snagging eye-members are respectively detachably mounted to a body of the tethered homing signal seeking UUV by means of sunderable fastening arrangements for retaining the plurality of cable snagging eye-members fastened to the body. The winching cable may be secured to the second tethered homing signal seeking UUV by a split cable arrangement connecting to a corresponding plurality of attachment points on the respective cable snagging eye-members, whereby a collective sundering of the plurality of fastening arrangements separates the plurality of cable snagging eye-members from the body of the tethered homing signal seeking UUV.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




A more complete understanding of the invention and many of the attendant advantages thereto will be readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings and wherein:





FIG. 1

is a schematic representation of a first untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV and an initial deployment of a second tethered homing signal seeking UUV from a submarine UUV retrieve tube for a recovery operation in accord with the present invention;





FIG. 2

is a schematic representation showing the first and second unmanned underwater vehicles in

FIG. 1

being winched aboard a submarine in accord with the present invention;





FIG. 3

is a schematic representation of a first unmanned underwater vehicle with a trailing capture cable in accord with another embodiment of the invention;





FIG. 4

is an elevational view of the second unmanned underwater vehicle of

FIG. 1

in accord with the present invention;





FIG. 5

is an elevational view, partially in section, showing a cable snagging eye-member member in accord with the present invention;





FIG. 6

is an elevational view showing operation whereby the cable snagging eye-member engages the trailing capture cable of the first UUV; and





FIG. 7

is an elevation view showing one embodiment of operation whereby the snagging eye-members are separable from the second UUV and the second UUV is disposable to permit greater room for the first UUV in the UUV retrieve tube.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT




Referring now to the drawings and, more particularly, to

FIG. 1

there is shown a retrieval system


10


in accord with the present invention operable through torpedo tube


12


in submarine


14


.




An unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV)


16


is launched from submarine


14


and is attached to winching cable


18


(and therefore tethered). In a preferred embodiment, cable


18


is simply a sturdy reinforced cable, for instance a steel or nylon cable, or coated cable reinforced with a reinforcing material such as steel or nylon, that may be used to winch a UUV


20


aboard submarine


14


through torpedo tube


12


. Thu, in the preferred embodiment, it is not necessary to establish a seawater sealed electrical connection or optical connection to the UUV


16


or to establish another seawater sealed electrical rotary connection through a winch connector and to instrumentation within the submarine. Thus, the design is greatly simplified by using a reinforced winching cable without the need to establish electronic communications through the winching cable. Although in a preferred embodiment electronic communications between UUV


16


and submarine


14


are not necessary, acoustic communications could be conveniently established therebetween because UUV


16


will preferably have acoustic electronic equipment therein as discussed subsequently.




An untethered UUV


20


, which is to be retrieved, is provided with a relatively short length of capture cable


22


extending therefrom. Cable


22


may be permanently deployed from UUV


20


or in some cases it may be desirable to provide means built within UUV


20


for deploying cable


22


at the time of retrieval. The general loci of capture cable


22


around transducer


26


is predetermined. Preferably attached to cable


22


are buoy


24


and transmitting transducer


26


. Buoy


24


may, if desired, comprise a drogue that resists being pulled through water for reasons discussed hereinafter. Transducer


26


preferably has a case or pod to house an acoustic homing beacon transducer such that the case or pod may also act as a mechanical jam in one embodiment of the invention as discussed hereinafter. Buoy


24


may also act as a mechanical jam. While use of buoy


24


is desirable to extend cable


22


with respect to UUV


20


, it is also possible to have cable


22


trail or stream behind UUV


20


if UUV


20


is moving as indicated in FIG.


3


. Thus, in

FIG. 3

water restriction element


28


, which may be a drogue, may be used to extend cable


22


with respect to UUV


20


as UUV


20


moves. It is desirable to have cable


22


extended, preferably in a known manner around a general loci with respect to UUV


20


to enhance capture thereof by UUV


16


. Instead of buoy


24


, a weight could be utilized to extend the cable vertically downwardly with respect to UUV


20


. Transducer


26


is preferably an acoustic transducer for use in sending an acoustic homing signal for receipt by UUV


16


. Other types of homing signals could conceivably be used, e.g., a flashing light in relatively clear water to avoid need for acoustic transmissions.




In

FIG. 2

, cable


22


attached to UUV


20


has been captured by UUV


16


in a manner to be discussed subsequently and is being winched back into torpedo tube


12


of submarine


14


. If the length of UUV


20


will take up substantially the entire length of torpedo tube


12


, then several options are available for permitting this purpose which options may be combined. In one option, discussed hereinafter, UUV


16


is jettisoned thereby providing more room for UUV


20


within torpedo tube


12


. As another option, a tubular extension to torpedo tube


12


may be added such as by connecting a tubular member to the torpedo tube breech door locking ring as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,447,115 referenced above and incorporated herein by reference but without the need for the complicated extendable piston system, tubular jettison system, and electrical interconnections as taught therein.




During winching procedures, it may be desirable for submarine


14


to move in a reverse direction with respect to a forward oriented torpedo tube


12


so as to keep cable


18


extended during winching to thereby orient cable


18


and UUV


20


for easier recovery into torpedo tube


12


.





FIG. 4

shows relevant enlarged features of UUV


16


. UUV


16


includes acoustic homing sensors


30


that may preferably be located at the nose of UUV


16


. By use of acoustic homing sensors


30


, UUV


16


is automatically steered toward acoustic transducer


26


for capturing cable


22


that is secured to UUV


20


.




Extendable capture arms


32


and


38


are used to capture and guide cable


22


of UUV


20


into cable snagging eye-member mechanism


34


disposed at the apex of the angle between capture arm


32


and body


36


of UUV


16


and discussed subsequently with respect to FIG.


5


. Capture arms are preferably spring-loaded so that they deploy to an open position as shown by arm


32


after UUV


16


exits torpedo tube


12


. The stowed position is as shown by capture arm


38


which is closed with respect to body


36


. While two capture arms are shown in UUV


16


in

FIG. 4

, a typical arrangement may also include three or four capture arms. If the orientation of capture cable


22


is known, then the capture arms can be positioned accordingly, e.g., if capture cable extends vertically, then the capture arms may be located on the sides of UUV


16


and UUV


16


programmed to maintain that orientation such as with a gravity orientation control. Alternatively, three capture arms could be utilized so as to snag capture cable


22


regardless of its orientation.




Cable


18


preferably attaches with a split or bifurcated end connection to cable snagging eye-members


34


and


40


. Preferably, cable


18


may engage a rear fin, such as fin


46


and then split into two lengths


42


and


44


for connection with cable snagging eye-members


34


and


40


whereby the origin of the split engages the rear end of fin


46


and the length of split cable ends


42


and


44


is designed to hold the split in contact with the rear end of fin


46


. Fin


46


may be between other fins that are aligned respectively with cable snagging eye-members


34


,


40


. In embodiments wherein tethered UUV


16


is propeller driven, the aft ends of the fins are preferably located at a position far enough forward along the taper of the tailcone to provide a tailcone diameter which exceeds the diameter of the propeller's circle of revolution. This arrangement helps keep cable


18


away from any propellers that may be used with UUV


16


. Other propulsion means such as jet pumps could be used for propelling UUV


16


. In one embodiment of the invention, cable snagging eye-members


34


and


40


may break away from body


36


of UUV


16


to permit additional room in torpedo tube


12


and any extensions thereof for the size of UUV


20


.





FIG. 5

shows one possible embodiment of cable snagging eye-member


34


that may be used to capture cable


22


of UUV


20


. However, it will be understood that snagging eye-member


34


may have many different constructions. Cable snagging eye-member


34


is located at the base of arm


32


. In the embodiment shown in

FIG. 5

cable snagging eye-member


34


includes a bracket element


47


having a hook-shaped portion


47




a


and a base portion


47




b


. Formed in the body


36


of tethered UUV


16


is a recess


36




a


. (This recess shows in the drawing as a dashed line along the majority of the length of base portion


47




b


, and in those locations of the view which have been out away to expose underlying cross sections, the recess shows a solid line.) Base portion


47




a


is seated in recess


36




a


. Arm


32


may be connected to hook-shaped portion


47




a


of bracket element


47


by spring-loaded hinge


48


. Arm


32


guides capture cable


22


towards spring-loaded, or resilient trigger or clip


50


for capture therein as indicated in FIG.


6


and FIG.


7


. In this embodiment, a carabiner type of snagging eye-member may be used whereby spring-loaded clip


50


bends inwardly by pressure of cable


22


being guided by arm


32


to permit cable


22


to be guided into an eye-opening, or ring


52


. Once capture cable


22


is inside ring


52


, then spring-loaded clip


50


moves to the closed position as shown. Because spring-loaded clip


50


is prevented from moving outwardly by stop surface


54


, cable


22


cannot come free and cable


22


is captured. The inner diameter of ring


52


may be designed to be larger than the diameter of cable


22


to permit relative sliding of the snagging eye-member with respect to capture cable


22


. As UUV


16


is winched and snagging eye-member


34


is winched toward submarine


14


, eye-member


34


may slide with respect to cable


22


, until it jams against either transducer pod


26


, as show in

FIG. 6

, or buoy


24


. As mentioned above, transducer pod


26


and buoy


24


may comprise enlargements to act as jam mechanisms. Other jam mechanism could also be mounted to cable


22


. In one embodiment transducer


26


and buoy


24


have less inertia and drag than UUV


20


so that the cable snagging eye-member always slides along capture cable


22


in a direction toward its terminal end in response to tension on winching cable


18


. Once snagging eye-member


34


is jammed against a jam mechanism as shown in

FIG. 7

, then cable


22


is effectively captured and may be pulled with cable


18


.




In one embodiment of the present invention, body


36


may be jettisoned. The advantage of this is to permit extra room within UUV capture tube


12


for UUV


20


. This goal may be effected in different ways. In one embodiment cable snagging eye-members are releasably attached to body


36


of UUV


16


. Each end of the split cable may then connect to a respective cable snagging eye-member. For instance, split cable


44


may preferably connect directly to snagging eye-member


34


. The cable snagging eye-member is releasably attached to body


36


such as by any releasable means including explosive bolts, electrically controllable latches, or the like. As another example, shear member


62


may be utilized for connecting cable snagging eye-member


34


to body


36


such that shear member


62


shears when a sufficient force is applied to constricted portions


61


of shear member


62


. The required force may be designed based on the weight and drag of UUV


16


so that shear bolts, pins, or studs can be appropriately selected. Buoy


24


may be provided as a drogue or an element resistant to force. As a result of pulling cable


18


, shear members


62


are sheared and cable snagging eye-member


34


is released from body


36


of UUV


16


. Cable snagging eye-member


34


is attached directly to the end of split cable


44


to thereby connect winching cable


18


to capture cable


22


. In conjunction with this or in another embodiment, a latch pin (not shown) could be disengaged by a latch arm (not shown) that pivots when cable


22


enters ring


52


. Once UUV


16


is jettisoned, there is more room in torpedo tube


12


and any tubular extensions thereof for UUV


20


as discussed above.





FIG. 6

shows more clearly the action of capturing capture cable


22


in one embodiment of the invention. As UUV


16


is guided toward UUV


20


as discussed above, capture cable


22


enters through resiliently mounted trigger or pin


50


into an eye-opening


52


of cable snagging eye-member


34


. Since eye-opening


52


in this embodiment preferably has a larger inner diameter than a diameter of capture cable


22


, cable snagging eye-member


34


slides easily along capture cable


22


when winching cable


18


is pulled toward an enlargement in capture cable


22


such as float


24


which acts as a jam mechanism.




In the embodiment of

FIG. 7

, UUV


16


is jettisoned. After one of snagging eye-members


34


or


40


engages a jam mechanism, such as buoy


24


, continued pulling on winching cable


18


creates a force that shears shear bolts


62


which are used to attach each of snagging eye-members


34


,


40


to body


36


of UUV


16


. The design force causing shear bolts


62


to be sheared (and therefore resulting in UUV


16


being jettisoned) is any predetermined magnitude of force significantly less than that required for overcoming the inertial and drag resistance of the body


36


of UUV


16


. All the snagging eye-members are secured by collectively sunderable attaching mechanisms comprising shear bolts


62


. Since some of the snagging eye-members do not engage capture cable


22


, they simply hang from the bifurcated end, such as remaining snagging member


40


, as indicated in dash, which hangs off bifurcated end


42


. Note that while shear bolts may be utilized, other means such as electrically controlled releasable latches or other means may be utilized for collectively separating all snagging eye-members from body


36


. For instance, upon receiving a certain acoustic signal, or upon contact with a pressure or tension sensor within eye-opening


62


or elsewhere, the cable snatching eye-members may be automatically released from body


36


such as by operation of a relay.




In summary, the method and system of the present invention results in positioning submarine


14


in the vicinity of UUV


20


or UUV


20


may move in the vicinity of submarine


14


. The distance between UUV


20


and submarine


14


may typically be within about 50 to 100 feet or any other suitable distance. UUV


20


will then typically deploy or is already attached to a short length of cable


22


containing acoustic transducer


26


and buoy


24


. Submarine


14


then launches UUV


16


, which may be a relatively small body as compared to UUV


20


. UUV


16


tows winching cable


18


as UUV


16


receives homing signals from transducer


26


. UUV


16


travels toward transducer


26


using automated guidance means that controls steering elements such as fins


46


. As UUV


16


engages or slides by transducer


26


, capture arms


32


and


38


, or other capture arms, will engage cable


22


and guide capture cable


22


into cable snagging eye-member


34


. Cable snagging eye-member slides along capture cable


22


until it encounters a jam, such as buoy


24


. Then winching cable


18


will be winched back into submarine


14


through torpedo tube


12


and any extensions of torpedo tube


12


that may be added.




Numerous variations of the above method are possible, some of which have already been described. UUV


16


could be launched from a ship. The capture arms could be electrically opened. UUV


16


could have an acoustic receiver/transmitter to receive commands from submarine


14


such as to open the capture arms. UUV


16


could have a sensor to detect capture of cable


22


and to send an acoustic signal back to submarine


14


that cable


22


has been captured. Locks to jettison UUV


16


with respect to cable snagging eye-member


34


could be acoustically activated by a signal from submarine


14


. UUV


16


could be programmed to determine if the capture arms passed by cable


22


without snagging cable


22


whereby UUV


16


could be winched back toward submarine


14


and released for a second attempt.




Therefore, it will be understood that many additional changes in the details, materials, steps and arrangement of parts, which have been herein described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art within the principle and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A method for retrieving a first untethered submarine tube-retrievable unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV having a capture cable extending therefrom, said capture cable having attached thereto intermediate said first UUV and said capture cable's trailing end a sender transducer unit for producing a homing beacon signal, said sender transducer unit being housed in a pod which additionally serves the purpose of being a first mechanical jam, said capture cable further having attached at its trailing end an element for exerting a cable extending force on said capture cable and which in addition serves as a second mechanical jam, said method comprising the steps of:attaching a winching cable to a tethered homing signal seeking unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV); launching said tethered homing signal seeking UUV from a UUV retrieve tube of a submarine with said winching cable being towed by said tethered homing signal seeking UUV; receiving said homing signal for guiding said tethered homing signal seeking UUV toward said capture cable; providing one or more capture arms that extend laterally from said tethered homing signal seeking UUV to form one or more respective apexes between said capture arms and a body of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV; providing a cable snagging eye-member at each of said one or more apexes, each cable snagging eye-member having formed therein a eye-opening of sufficient cross-sectional size to allow said cable snagging eye-member to freely slide along said capture cable when said capture cable is snagged therein; impinging a capture arm against said capture cable to guide said capture cable to a respective apex and into snagged condition within said eye-opening of said cable snagging eye-member; and retrieving said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV by pulling said winching cable to slide said cable snagging eye-member along said capture cable until said cable snagging eye-member engages a one of either of the first or second mechanical jam, whereupon continued pulling hauls said untethered submarine tube-retrievable to into said UUV retrieve tube of said submarine.
  • 2. The method of claim 1 wherein:said sender transducer unit and said force exerting element at said trailing end of said capture cable singly and collectively presenting less inertial and drag resistance to a force to move them through water than the inertial and drag resistance presented by said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV, whereby said cable snagging eye-member will always slide along said capture cable toward a one of either of the first or second mechanical jam.
  • 3. The method of claim 1 wherein said step of attaching said winching cable further comprises:providing a split in said winching cable with first and second ends; attaching said first end to a first cable snagging eye-member; and attaching said second end to a second cable snagging eye-member.
  • 4. The method of claim 3 further comprising providing that said first and second cable snagging eye-members are detachable from said tethered homing signal seeking UUV.
  • 5. The method of claim 1 wherein said element for exerting said cable extending force on said capture cable when immersed in water resists motion thereby causing said capture cable to stream behind said tethered homing signal seeking UUV when the latter is in motion.
  • 6. The method of claim 1 further comprising providing that said homing signal is an acoustic signal.
  • 7. The method of claim 1 further comprising providing that said one or more capture arms are spring loaded for automatically extending outwardly.
  • 8. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of:providing that said cable snagging eye-member at each apex is detachably mounted to said body of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV; and detaching said one or more cable snagging eye-members after said capture cable is snagged by a respective cable snagging eye-member but before said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV enters said UUV retrieve tube.
  • 9. The method of claim 1 wherein said UUV retrieve tube is a torpedo tube of said submarine and said winching cable is pulled into said torpedo tube from inboard of said submarine.
  • 10. The method of claim 1 wherein said element for exerting a force attached to said trailing end of said capture cable is a buoy to cause said capture cable to generally extend vertically.
  • 11. A system for retrieving a first untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV, said system comprising:a submarine UUV retrieve tube; a capture cable trailing from said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV, said capture cable having attached a sender transducer unit for producing a homing beacon signal intermediate said first UUV and the trailing end of said capture cable, said sender transducer unit having a pod which houses said sender transducer unit and which additionally serves the function of being a first mechanical jam, said capture cable further having attached to said trailing end an element for exerting a cable extending force on said capture cable and which additionally serves as a second mechanical jam; a tethered homing signal seeking UUV carrying a receiver transducer for receiving said homing beacon signal to guide said tethered homing signal seeking UUV toward said homing beacon signal and said capture cable; a winching cable secured to said tethered homing signal seeking UUV and extendable through said UUV retrieve tube; a plurality of extendable capture arms mounted to said tethered homing signal seeking UUV for engaging said capture cable, said extendable capture arms in their extended positions being angled with respect to a body of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV for guiding said capture cable to an apex formed between each said extendable capture arm in its extended position and said body; and a plurality of cable snagging eye-members, each cable snagging eye-member being mounted at respective apexes having formed therein an eye-opening of sufficient cross-sectional size to allow said cable snagging eye-member to freely slide along said capture cable when the latter is snagged therein, each cable snagging eye-member being operative to irreversibly admit said capture cable into said eye-opening.
  • 12. The system of claim 11 wherein said sender transducer unit and said force exerting element at said trailing end of said capture cable singly and collectively present substantially less inertial and drag resistance to a pulling force applied to said winching cable than the inertial and drag resistance which said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV presents to such a force, whereby upon said capture cable being snagged in a cable snagging eye-member of the plurality, and upon subsequent pulling of said winching cable, the eye-member will slide with respect to the capture cable and jam against a one of either of the first or second mechanical jams and continued pulling will haul said untethered submarine tube-retrievable UUV to said UUV retrieve tube.
  • 13. The system of claim 11 further comprising a Y split in said winching cable to form a first end and a second end for attachment to said tethered homing signal seeking UUV.
  • 14. The system of claim 13 wherein said first end attaches to a first of said plurality of cable snagging eye-members, and said second end attaches to a second of said plurality of cable snagging eye-members.
  • 15. The system of claim 11 further comprising:said plurality of cable snagging eye-members are respectively detachably mounted to the body of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV; a corresponding collectively sunderable plurality of fastening arrangements for retaining said plurality of cable snagging eye-members fastened to said body; and said winching cable being secured to said second tethered homing signal seeking UUV by a split cable arrangement connecting to a corresponding plurality of attachment points on said cable snagging eye-members whereby a collective sundering of said plurality of fastening arrangements separates said plurality of cable snagging eye-members from said body of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV.
  • 16. The system of claim 15 wherein each said fastening arrangement of said collectively sunderable plurality of fastening arrangements comprises a shear bolt adapted to shear upon said winching cable having applied thereto a pulling force of a predetermined magnitude less than that necessary to overcome the inertial and drag resistance of said body of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV.
  • 17. The system of claim 11 wherein said element for exerting a force attached to said trailing end of said capture cable is an element which when immersed in water resists application of a motion producing force thereto.
  • 18. The system of claim 11 wherein said element for effecting a force attached to said trailing end of said capture cable is a buoy.
  • 19. The system of claim 11 wherein said tethered homing signal seeking UUV is propelled by a propeller mechanism at a stern end of a tailcone portion of said UUV and has a plurality of fins radially projecting from said tailcone transversely to a longitudinal axis of said tethered homing signal seeking UUV in equiangularly spaced relation to one another, said system further comprising:the aft edges of said plurality of fins being disposed at an axial position along said tethered homing signal seeking UUV longitudinal axis whereat the tailcone's diameter is greater than that of the circle of revolution of said propeller mechanism; said plurality of cable snagging eye-members being disposed at an axial position of said longitudinal UUV axis forward of said plurality of fins; said plurality of cable snagging eye-members including a pair of first and second eye-members aligned with a first and second of said plurality of fins, said first and second fins being disposed on either side of a third intermediate fin; and said winching cable at an outboard end relative to said submarine including a bifurcating split with a crotch of two branches of said bifurcating split being disposed at a rear edge of said third fin.
  • 20. The system of claim 12 wherein said UUV retrieve tube is located in the bow of said submarine and said submarine is operative to propel itself rearwardly to at least assist in application of said pulling force to said winching cable.
STATEMENT OF THE GOVERNMENT INTEREST

The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for Governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefore.

US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
3757722 Seiple Sep 1973 A
5291194 Ames Mar 1994 A
5396859 Hillenbrand et al. Mar 1995 A
5398636 Hillenbrand Mar 1995 A
5447115 Moody Sep 1995 A
5748102 Barron May 1998 A