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Old 08-30-13, 06:44 PM   #1
sublynx
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Default The U-boats did use hydrophone based speed evaluation

Ever since Raduz's Hydrophone hunting tutorial there's been controversy among us reality buffs about whether the Germans used hydrophone for assessing ship speeds.

Well... Have a look at these pics I took from U-552's 6th war patrol KTB:


Topp's description: "200 RPM = 20 knots"


The torpedo firing report

To me this looks clear. Topp was submerged, the hydrophone operator counted the 4-stacked destroyer's engine revolutions per minute and Topp estimated that 200 RPM corresponded to a speed of 20 knots.

I haven't seen this in other war diaries I've read, so I believe hydrophone speed estimating was a rare occurrence. But I also believe that estimating the speed of ship by a hydrophone was not something that Topp just invented then and there. If he had, he had written more about it - now it looks just like a standard practice that needs no explanations whatsoever. Just the "200 RPM = 20 knots".

Here's the link to the war diary:

http://www.uboatarchive.net/KTB552-6.htm

Anyone interested in giving back to the SH3 community? There would be a need for someone to make the RPM / speed charts for the Warships in SH3. The charts for merchants have already been done for GWX and NYGM by Canovaro and CapSea - now we would need to get the info for those pesky Black Swans and Flower corvettes etc
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Old 08-30-13, 06:59 PM   #2
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Good job! New information is always welcome.
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Old 08-30-13, 07:20 PM   #3
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In this article written by Hitman, you can read that not only the U-552 implement this tactic. There are also references in logbooks of U-505.
Determining the speed from the revolutions account provided only a general idea about the speed of a ship.

http://www.u-historia.com/uhistoria/.../intecnico.htm

The article is called "Adquisición de datos para las soluciones de tiro en los U-boot", in the technical section. The page does not let me give the direct link.

Best Regards.
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Last edited by Ligne Maginot; 08-30-13 at 08:39 PM.
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Old 08-31-13, 04:58 AM   #4
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S! Very interesting document. I really appreciated reading it.
and thanks for sharing it and the link to the diary.

Great investigation work

Merci
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Old 08-31-13, 05:51 AM   #5
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Wikipedia: "Propeller RPM: The speed of a ship is roughly proportional to the rotation rate of the propeller. This approach is most useful when the propeller has constant pitch. It is less useful on ships with propellers that have variable pitch propellers or no propellers (like sailing ships). A variation of this approach was used by submarines during World War II to determine the speed of targets. The sonar operator would listen to the sound of a target's propeller and would determine its rotation rate. Knowing the propeller rotation rate and visually identifying the type of ship, the target's speed could be estimated".
This would be a nice mission for one of the excellent modders here: A solution for deciding propeller RPM's taken from the sonar and, consequently, estimating the ship's speed compared with the ship type as observed in the periscope....

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Old 08-31-13, 06:31 AM   #6
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American boats certainly used hydrophone RPM counts to determine speed. Dick O'Kane has a couple of lengthy passages describing how he rigged a mic and a shaving brush so the sound man could broadcast the simulated propeller sound over the 1MC. The entire approach party trained in determining RPMs from the beat count. And Paul Schratz (IIRC) describes the sound man counting out the beats to get Rs. I have no evidence, but I find it likely that the KM did the same. I always assumed that the "Moving slow." portion of the sound man's report was based on R counts. Certainly couldn't get it from BRA at first contact.
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Old 08-31-13, 07:46 AM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Leandros View Post
This would be a nice mission for one of the excellent modders here: A solution for deciding propeller RPM's taken from the sonar and, consequently, estimating the ship's speed compared with the ship type as observed in the periscope....
Here you go: a version of NYGM merchants
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=193770

and GWX merchants
http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=186854

The warships haven't been done and now with all the info you others have provided I'm thinking a warship version should also be done.

It should not be totally accurate maybe, as the Kriegsmarine would have had no easy way of measuring what the precise values were. They could have measured the precise values of their own destroyers, cruisers and battleships easily though and use those values as proxy for a crude estimation of what the Royal Navy warships would have been able to achieve
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