View Full Version : Type VII club
Indiana_Jones
06-10-07, 07:57 PM
Do we have the type VII club yet? lol
-Indy
Puster Bill
06-10-07, 08:02 PM
I'm still waiting for a Type XXIII club...
danurve
06-10-07, 08:27 PM
Do we have the type VII club yet? lol
-Indy
We should by now :know: :yep:
Mr.Elendig
06-10-07, 09:17 PM
If I remember correctly there used to be one atleast back in "the good old days"
its a viic
06-10-07, 09:48 PM
They were know as the '' workhorse '' of the Kriegsmarine! There should have been one years ago.
Its a viic is in babeeee!!!
Indiana_Jones
06-11-07, 12:36 AM
I love the slender look of the VII :)
And as its a viic said, they were the work horse :)
-Indy
Great crash dive time and like it has been mentioned a good sleek sexy look.
VIIC with FUBARSVIIC41 U997 skin
Jimbuna
06-11-07, 05:07 AM
I'm still waiting for a Type XXIII club...
I'd much rather have those types that saw service ie: XB or XIV :arrgh!:
ReallyDedPoet
06-11-07, 07:12 AM
Great crash dive time and like it has been mentioned a good sleek sexy look.
VIIC with FUBARSVIIC41 U997 skin
Nice boat, nice skin. The majority of my time was spent in a VIIC in SH3.
RDP
Puster Bill
06-11-07, 09:18 AM
I'm still waiting for a Type XXIII club...
I'd much rather have those types that saw service ie: XB or XIV :arrgh!:
I'm sure that the crews of the Sneland I, Avondale Park, and the few others sunk by Type XXIII's would be interested to know that the boats that sank them weren't in service...
Besides, a XB might be interesting, but I'd get bored playing a XIV.
The Type XXIII is perfect for late war close to the British Isles: Small, quick, agile, and a crash dive time in the single digits. It's the ultimate 'sneak into a harbor' boat. The last two ships sunk by a U-boat in WWII were sunk by a single Type XXIII inside the Firth of Forth. Not bad for having only two 'eels'.
Another interesting fact: None of the XXIII 'fronteboot' were sunk by enemy action. Six boats made 10 patrols from January to May 1945, and none of them were sunk. A comparable effort by Type VIIC's, or even IID's, would have resulted in most of the boats being sunk.
There is even a better case for the Type XXIII than the XXI: No XXI boat sank an enemy ship, and only two had just started patrols when the war had ended.
But other than that, I completely agree with you...;)
As the founding member of the IX Club he is what to do, Someone just start up a club for you Type VII Kapitans. ;) :yep:
Easy as pie, piece of cake. :lol:
I would like to be in the type VII club. maybe we could name it something gawdy like how the type IX club calls themselves "exclusive."
here are some power-words:
1. the high speed, low drag type VII club
2. the elite type VII club
3. nevermind, I like #2 the best.
Puster Bill
06-11-07, 12:00 PM
I would like to be in the type VII club. maybe we could name it something gawdy like how the type IX club calls themselves "exclusive."
here are some power-words:
1. the high speed, low drag type VII club
2. the elite type VII club
3. nevermind, I like #2 the best.
Maybe we could have a catchy slogan:
Victory In Infinity
WolfOfCampscapel
06-11-07, 01:13 PM
Had a bit of a culture shock going from my trusty IIA to a, shall we say, "reconditioned" VIIB ... the brits actually can see and hit me now, with their bombs and depth charges! Yikes!
(Having a deck gun and double digit eels makes up for it in time, I suspect)
danurve
06-11-07, 01:20 PM
Had a bit of a culture shock going from my trusty IIA to a, shall we say, "reconditioned" VIIB ... the brits actually can see and hit me now, with their bombs and depth charges! Yikes!
(Having a deck gun and double digit eels makes up for it in time, I suspect)
Not to forget the extra fuel and speed herr kaluen.
That culture shock will soon turn into a trusty home away from home serenity.
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