Thursday, August 26, 2010

Victor III SSN, (Type 671RTM)

Approximately four Victor III class boats are currently operational with the Russian Navy, the only survivors of a total of 48 boats built from 1968 until 1993 in three distinct variants. By Russian standards they are relatively small but they are nevertheless well armed and equipped. The original Type 671 Victor I displaced 4,300 tons on the surface and could dive to 1,300 ft (400m); 15 were completed between 1968 and 1975. A further seven Type 671 PT Victor IIs entered service between 1972 and 1978 and these had a hull lengthened by 16ft (5m) and displacement rose to 4,500 tons. The current Type 671 PTM Victor II had a further section added to the hull, increasing the length to 345ft (105m) and displacement to 4,900 tons, and could be distinguished visually by a large streamlined pod mounted above the stern which contained the towed array sonar system. One boat was modified to incorporate a trials launch system in front of the sail for the SS-N21 missiles, which are normally fired from the forward torpedo tubes, and this boat is sometimes referred to as a Victor IV (Type 671 RTMK).

The last Victor IIIs built utilised eight-bladed propellers and are much quieter than their predecessors, and are almost comparable to the US SSNs in this respect. A total of 26 Victor IIIs were built, commissioning between 1978 and 1991, but today no more than four are active and all Victor I and IIs have been laid up or scrapped. In the long term the remaining Victors will be replaced by the newer Akula and Sierra classes, although construction of the latter appears to have ceased some time ago.

SPECIFICATION Type: SSN Class: Victor (Type 671 RTM) Displacement: 4,850 tons surface, 6,300 tons dived length: 351.1ft 11.07m) Beam: 34.8ft 11.06m) Draught: 24.3ft (7.4m) Machinery: nuclear; 2 VM-4 PWR reactors, 150MW; 2 turbines, 31 ,000hp; 1 shaft; 2 spinners Speed & Range: 30kt dived Complement: 98 Missiles: SS-N-21 Sampson long-range SLCM ASW & USW: 2 26in (660mm) and 4 21 in (553mm) torpedo tubes, various torpedoes; SS-N-15 Starfish A/S missile launched from 21 in 1533mm) torpedo tubes; SS-N-16 Stallion long-range A/S missile launched from 26in 1660mm) tubes; or 36 mines in lieu of torpedoes Sensors: radar: Snoop Tray surface search; sonar: Shark Gill hull-mounted search and attack; Shark Rib passive flank array; Mouse Roar hull-mounted high-frequency active attack; Scat 3 passive towed array.

LINK

Walrus SSK,

Bruinvis (S810), one of four Walrus class SSKs.
Walrus (S802). Note the cruciform stern planes.

The initial contract for the first two boats was awarded in 1979 with a second pair ordered in 1985. Construction was delayed by design changes including a lengthening of the hull to accommodate larger diesel generators and also by a serious fire aboard Walrus while it was being fitted out. Consequently the first to commission was Zeeleeuw in 1990, followed by the repaired Walrus in 1992. The second pair, Dolfljn and Bruin vis, were laid down in 1986 and 1988, and completed in 1993 and 1994 respectively.

The basic design of these boats was based on the Zwaardvis class, which has now been retired. The hull dimensions were similar but normal diving depth was increased from 650ft (200m) to 1,000ft (300m) by the use of stronger HT steel. A total of 20 Harpoon missiles or torpedoes can be stowed. The latter may include Mk.48 Mod.4 heavyweight wire-guided torpedoes with a range of 23.5 miles (38km) at 55kt or 31 miles (50km) at 40kt, or Honeywell NT37D wire-guided ASW torpedoes with a range of 12.5 miles (20km). As an alternative, up to 40 mines may be carried instead of the torpedoes and missiles. Designed for ocean operations, the Walrus class boats have an endurance of 60 days at sea.

SPECIFICATION Type: SSK Class: Walrus Displacement: 2,465 tons surface, 2,800 tons dived Length: 223ft (167.7m) Beam: 27.6ft (18.4m) Draught: 23ft (7m) Machinery: diesel electric; 3 SEMT-Pielstick 12 PM 200VG diesels, 6,300hp; 3 alternators, 288MW; 1 Holec motor, 6,910hp; 1shaft Speed & Range: 20kt dived; 10,000 miles (16,100km) (13kt at surface) Complement: 52 Missiles: Boeing Sub Harpoon long-range SSM (launched from torpedo tubes) ASW & USW: 4 21 in (533mm) torpedo tubes, Mk48 long-range wire-guided and NT370 wire-guided medium-range torpedoes Sensors: radar: ZW07 surface search; sonar: TSM 2272 hull-mounted active/passive search and attack; Type 2026 passive towed array; OUUX 5 passive ranging and intercept.

LINK

R-class

British submarine design took a decisive turn away from Holland’s concepts with the development of the D class, which entered service in 1908. These much larger boats introduced saddle tanks for ballast and marked the British shift to long-range craft optimized for surface operation and seaworthiness. They set the pattern for subsequent British development that was broken only by the R class, built as antisubmarine platforms and optimized for underwater performance, which entered service very late in World War I.
R-1 (24 April 1918), R-2 (25 April 1918), R-3 (8 June 1918), R-4 (8 June 1918)
Builder: Chatham
R-7 (14 May 1918), R-8 (28 June 1918)
Builder: Barrow
R- 9 (12 August 1918), R- 10 (5 October 1918)
Builder: Armstrong
R-11 (16 March 1918), R-12 (9 April 1918)
Builder: Cammell Laird
Displacement: 410 tons (surfaced), 503tons (submerged)
Dimensions: 153990 x 15930 x 11960
Machinery: 1 diesel engine, 1 electric motor, 1 shaft. 240 bhp/1200 shp = 9.5/15knots
Range : 2000 nm at 8 knots surfaced; submerged characteristics unknown
Armament: 6 x 180 torpedo tubes (bow), total 12 torpedoes
Complement: 22
Notes: The Admiralty designed this class as fast boats that could overtake and sink enemy submarines. The hull cross-section duplicated that of the H class: the hull form was similar, and the whole external form was streamlined for superior underwater performance. Machinery was half an H-class installation. The bow compartment contained five powerful, sensitive hydrophones with suitable direction-finding equipment to locate and target submarines underwater. These boats met all expectations, but the end of World War I seemed to terminate their mission; they were discarded in February 1923.

M-class

The British Royal Navy M-class submarines were a small class of diesel electric submarine built during World War I. The unique feature of the class was a 12-inch (305 mm) gun mounted in a turret forward of the conning tower.
Background
They were ordered in place of the last four of the first group of steam propelled K-class submarines, K17-K21, the original orders being cancelled.
They were initially intended as coastal bombardment vessels, submarine monitors, but their role had been changed before detailed design begun. The intention was that merchant ships could be engaged at periscope depth or on the surface using the gun, rather than torpedoes. At that time torpedoes were considered ineffective against moving warships at more than 1000 yards (900 m). Nevertheless it is unlikely that a well-constructed ship would be sunk by a single 12-inch (305 mm) shell hit.
Design
The guns were 12-inch (305 mm) 40 calibre Mark IX guns from spares for the Formidable-class battleships. The mounting allowed them to elevate by 20 degrees, depress 5 degrees and train 15 degrees in either direction from the centre line. The weapon was normally fired from periscope depth using a simple bead sight on the end of the gun aligned with the target through the periscope at a range of around 1200 metres. The exposure time of the gun above the surface was around 75 seconds. The submarine had to surface to reload the gun, which would take about 3 minutes. In practice the concept was not very successful and only three of the four M-class boats ordered were completed, all between 1917 and 1918. M-class submarines are sometimes called submarine monitors.
M1 and M2 also had four 18-inch (450-mm) torpedo tubes whilst M3 and M4 had 21-inch (533 mm) diameter tubes and were 3 metres longer to accommodate them.
Service
    * M1 was the only one to enter service before the end of World War I but did not see action. She was captained during her sea trials by experienced submariner Commander Max Horton after his return from the Baltic, and was later lost with all hands while on exercise in the English Channel near Start Point in Devon after a collision with a Swedish collier, SS Vidar, on 12 November 1925. The wreck of M1 was discovered by a diving team led by Innes McCartney in 1999 at a depth of 73 metres. Later that year the wreck was visited again by Richard Larn and a BBC TV documentary crew, and the resulting film was aired in March 2000.
    * M2 was converted to a seaplane carrier in 1925, a hangar replacing the gun turret. She was lost off Chesil Beach on 26 January 1933. It is thought that the hangar door was opened prematurely. M2 lies in much shallower water, 32 metres deep with the top of the conning tower only 20 metres below the surface at low tide. She is a popular attraction for local scuba divers with as many as six boats anchored above her on busy days.
    * M3 was converted to a minelayer in 1927 with stowage for 100 mines, primarily to test the mine-handling equipment of the Porpoise class. The mines were carried on a conveyor belt which ran along her upper deck and covered over by an enlarged casing. The mines were laid through a door at the stern. She was scrapped in 1932 after the trials had been completed.
    * M4 was broken up before completion.
In 1924 all three completed members of the class were used to test hull camouflage to reduce the visibility of submarines from aircraft—M1 was painted grey-green, M2 dark grey and M3 was painted dark blue.
References
    * Martin H. Brice M-class Submarines, Outline Publications, 1983, ISBN 0-946784-00-0
    * D.K. Brown, The Grand Fleet, Warship Design and Development 1906-1922, Caxton Editions, 2003, ISBN 1-84067-531-4

LINK

Sunday, August 22, 2010

A U-Boat “Saga!"



U-505. a typical Type IXC with her distinctive axe-head tradition insignia, enters a U-boat pen in occupied France. Commanded by Oberleutnant zur See Harald Lange, she was forced to the surface and captured north-west of Dakar on 4 June 1944 after having undertaken a total of 18 war patrols and having sunk eight enemy ships.

I just ended reading the book "The Sea Hunters - Escort Carriers vs, U-Boats, 1941-1945" by Kenneth Poolman. At page 179 I found the following: "They were now actually steaming away from the U-Boat, though twice VC8's planes narrowly missed her [U-505]. She came up after dark to recharge, and a T.B.M. flew within six miles of her without its A.S.V. picking her up, or the sub's unreliable Naxos giving warning. Minutes later she had submerged another T.B.M. flew right over her. Unknowing, she settled down for a quite Sunday, June 4th [1944], on her way home". The planes were from USN's CVE Guadalcanal, the submarine was the U-505 that was captured later in the day.

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US Navy Task Force 22.3 consisting of the escort aircraft carrier USS Guadalcanal (CVE-60), with Composite Squadron Eight (VC-8) aboard, and destroyers escorts USS Chatelain (DE-149), USS Flaherty (DE-135), USS Jenks (DE-665), USS Pillsbury (DE-133) and USS Pope (DE-134) attack the German U-Boat U-505 [Type IXC] in the South Atlantic. Directed by VC-8 TBM Avengers, the Chatelain drops depth charges, one of which blasts a hole in the outer hull of the submarine and rolled the U-boat on its beam ends. The inexperienced U-Boat captain thought his ship was sinking so he surfaced. The US commander of this task force, Captain Daniel V. Gallery, USN, had been planning for an opportunity to board a submarine and capture all the documents and boarding parties had been trained and equipped. A boarding party from Pillsbury was ordered to the submarine and found it abandoned. The men of the boarding party went below seizing all papers and books and closing valves and stopping leaks. By this time, a larger boarding party arrived from Guadalcanal and after securing a tow line and rescuing the Germans from the water, the Guadalcanal took U-505 in tow. For their action, the crews of the six ships were awarded a Presidential Unit Citation. U-505 is currently on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, Illinois, USA.

U-Boat Survivability

I can tell you what was experienced during the capture of U-505 [Type IXC] . After surfacing the sub was struck with 50 caliber machine gun fire from the Wildcat fighters and both 20mm and 40 mm rounds fired from the DEs. All of this penetrated the outer hull and superstructure but did not penetrate the pressure hull.

So far as I know, the weapons which would breach the pressure hull were depth charges, hedgehogs, the rockets fired from aircraft, and the 3 inch rounds from the DEs and 5 inch rounds fired from the DDs. Also, the Mk24 homing torpedo "Fido" would breach the pressure hull.

The penetration capacity of the bullets depend on their velocity at impact. So when you are saying "...could easily penetrate the outer...", distance and end velocity are the determining factors. Outer skin parts were as thin as 5mm (a tad less than 1/4"), pressure vessels of both type VIIc and IXc 18.5mm (3/4") with VIIc41 22.5mm (7/8"). Do not know of any case, where A/C 50 cal machine guns actually penetrated pressure hull. Could do a lot of damage to the flak crews etc.


 
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