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Graf Paper
01-11-08, 03:26 PM
Whew! Just got back into 1st Flotilla's port at Kiel after my sixth patrol. This turned out to be my longest patrol yet.

It started out on glorious spring dawn, light winds and the ocean as placid as glass. I had been assigned to patrol grid AF59, off the northwest coast of Norway. It turned out to be a very stormy and dull trip from the moment I first sighted the Norwegian coast. The waves were rolling so much that my boat occasionally would find itself submerged in 10 meters of storm surges that had me truly worried about my watch crew, topside. Sank one tiny scow of a merchant, all the other contacts were warships from my team there to repel the coming Brits.

Finally got a transmission from BdU stating that all U-boats were released from duties at Norway, so I was left to my own devices as to where I should go next.

I decided to go 'round the Shetlands and south along the English coast toward Ireland. Took me several uneventful, stormy days to get there but my whim paid off almost immediately when a contact report came stating a Task Force was in my vicinity! As I was laying course and dashing along an intercept heading, a new contact report was received. A Large Convoy was headed my way from grid AM52!

Knowing my primary mission as a U-boat commander is to interdict merchant shipping, I broke away from my intercept of the Task force and made full speed toward the convoy.

As I close in, my sonarman starts rattling off so many contacts I had to double check the hydrophones myself to make sure he wasn't reporting the same ships twice! 10 merchants and 4 warships!

The entire North Atlantic seems to be in the grip of the storms I must have dragged with me from Norway. The sea is even more rough here and the rain is falling hard with a heavy fog that has nearly eliminated visibility, so I rely on my man at the hydrophones to zero us in to position.

All stop. Periscope depth and wait.

One of the warship contacts is inside the convoy and nearly on top of me! I scan around and a Revenge-class battleship falls into the crosshairs of my 'scope. My first battleship target! My hands tremble and my heart leaps in my chest from the exicitement. Distance is a mere 432 meters but there's not enough time to set up a salvo and fire before she's sailed past me.

I very nearly gave up at that point, thinking the destroyers would be on me for sure if I broke silent running to catch up for another shot.

Then it occurred to me that the same soup that was keeping me from spotting targets until they were in my lap would also blind the enemy in a similar fashion!

Surface the boat! Ahead flank! I was catching up to that war-horse, determined to bring her down. This patch of ocean was so crowded from the convoy I had to dive under one ship to avoid a collision and passed so near to the stern of another you could count the rivets in the hull plating! But my strategy was working. The rough seas and foul weather hid me from view and the escort screen (C&D, A&B, and Flower Corvette) was busy listening for submerged attacks.


Let me digress for a moment by stating that you should treat your sonarman very well. A good one is worth his weight in gold for a situation like this.

I pester the sonarman for updates on the battleship so I can double check my plot. Yes! We've pulled ahead just enough. Hard to port! Ahead slow! I'm at the UZO and all lined up. Setting salvo, tubes 1...3...4, impact trigger, shallow run, 5 degrees spread. Almost there! Got to time the shot with the pitching of the waves...

Bearing 358.
Open tube doors!
Bearing 000.
FIRE!
Torpedoes away!

Each second that passes feels like its own agonizing eternity...
Will the torpedoes run true?
Will enough detonate on target?
Did I line everything up right?

Sure enough, there's three flashes visible even through this pea-soup fog as the eels impact. GOT HER! :D (I'm sure my men are wondering about my sanity at this point as I caper around the bridge, giggling like a school girl and doing the happy-dance).


She burns gloriously and explosions rip through her hull like a symphony of thunder. Within minutes after being hit, the mighty battle-wagon slips beneath the storm-tossed waves!

Ship sunk! Grid AM 53. Revenge-class Battleship, 31000 tons. May 3, 1940, 10:11.

Oh yeah! Life is good! *quiver* *gasp*

I then went on to sink a Whale Factory ship, Nipiwan Park tanker, and a Large Merchant.

By then I had raised so much of a ruckus that I finally drew the attention of the three escorts. It took some fancy steering but I managed to avoid them, despite one close shave with the C&D.

I still had two eels left, but I figured I had pressed my luck enough with this bunch, who were likely screaming for my head on a stick after bringing down the three largest vessels in the convoy.

Later, as I was passing to the west of the Orkneys, I stumbled across that Task Force I'd abandoned earlier, but they were well east of my position. As I was racing to catch up, yet another Large Convoy popped up. They were following the same general tack as the Task Force but several hours behind, which meant they were that much closer to me!

I go through the steps to place myself abeam of their path, waited about 4 minutes, and then rammed my last two eels into the belly of an Ore Carrier.

Once again, I used the weather to my advantage and slipped away while surfaced which left the escorts running around in circles looking for a submerged U-boat that wasn't there! :rotfl:

After that, it was simply a matter of breaking out the record collection and speculating about the frauleins back home when we made port.

Patrol 6:
Merchants sunk- 5 (33,601 tons)
Warships sunk- 1 (Revenge BB 31,000 tons)
Total Tonnage sunk- 64,601 :arrgh!:

I am overjoyed at how well this patrol turned out! And my very first battleship sunk, ever!

My return to Kiel was on May 10th, 1940. As I recall, 1st Flotilla was moved to Brest in June and that would coincide with the time my U-boat would be ready for a new patrol. I wonder if this next patrol will begin in Kiel and end with me having to sail around to Brest?

von Kinderei
01-11-08, 03:40 PM
Not tryin' to hi-jack this thread BUT ...

I've noticed also that when you're on the surface in rough seas and the boat does go under ( like stated in this report ) with the watch crew top side ... is there a remote chance that one or more COULD be washed over board as in real life ... would even be modable ?

Blacklight
01-11-08, 04:31 PM
I've noticed also that when you're on the surface in rough seas and the boat does go under ( like stated in this report ) with the watch crew top side ... is there a remote chance that one or more COULD be washed over board as in real life ... would even be modable ?

You know.. that's a good point. Also, it would be nice to make a random chance of crewmembers being washed overboard when moving external torpedoes into the sub in rough weather too.

I'd imagine though that if this was possible, the GWX guys would have put it in there so I assume that without a SHIII SDK and source code, it's probably impossible.

fat jez
01-11-08, 04:45 PM
I'd imagine that in reality the crew would have been tethered to the ship if the weather was bad. How that would work if they had to crash dive, I don't know, I'm guessing. Does anybody know for sure?

Cheers,
Stephen

Jimbuna
01-11-08, 04:51 PM
There is an incident (not sure of details now, but other people and myself have posted the details a good while back) where a U-boat sailed merrily on it's way for over an hour after all it's watch crew had been swept overboard.
Nobody knew until it was time to change the watch http://www.psionguild.org/forums/images/smilies/wolfsmilies/pirate.gif

von Kinderei
01-11-08, 05:34 PM
Jimbuna ...

I remember readin' that somewhere too ... that was a freaky incident :o

deepboat
01-11-08, 05:40 PM
U 106 (http://uboat.net/boats/u106.htm), 23 Oct, 1941
An incredibly sad event befell U-106 on this date. When the replacement watch opened the tower hatch in rough seas they found out that the entire previous tower watch of 4 men had been washed overboard. [Oberleutnant zur See Werner Grüneberg, Fähnrich zur See Herbert von Bruchhausen, Oberbootsmannmaat Karl Heemann, Matrose Ewald Brühl

von Kinderei
01-11-08, 05:50 PM
Thats the story ...

That was sad indeed :cry:

Abd_von_Mumit
01-11-08, 05:59 PM
Graf Paper - thanks for the report, that was a nice read. Congratulations for the BB and wishes of even more such exciting moments. :)

Jimbuna
01-11-08, 06:15 PM
U 106 (http://uboat.net/boats/u106.htm), 23 Oct, 1941
An incredibly sad event befell U-106 on this date. When the replacement watch opened the tower hatch in rough seas they found out that the entire previous tower watch of 4 men had been washed overboard. [Oberleutnant zur See Werner Grüneberg, Fähnrich zur See Herbert von Bruchhausen, Oberbootsmannmaat Karl Heemann, Matrose Ewald Brühl

Well spotted Kaleun http://www.psionguild.org/forums/images/smilies/wolfsmilies/thumbsup.gif

deepboat
01-11-08, 08:22 PM
Saw your post, so I did a quick search on uboat.net and there it was.

Graf Paper
01-12-08, 07:16 PM
Thank you for the compliment on my report, Abd_von_Mumit. :)

It was worrisome to constantly have my boat plunging down to 10 meters in those heavy seas. I was concerned that a wave might eventually swamp the boat long enough to drown or wash my watch crew overboard, so I only had a minimal crew of two seamen above deck and kept my officers below unless I needed their expert eyes to help spot ships when we were on the hunt.

I'd also like to add that my "halsschmerzen", or "sore throat", was also cured. I was handing out the medals and promotions to my crew last night and discovered I had been awarded the Knight's Cross! :D

So I now have all the medals from U-boat Badge up to the much coveted "Das Ritterkreuz" and all three of my original officers have up to Iron Cross 1st Class. My torpedo officer has only been with us for three patrols now, but he's gotten up to Iron Cross 2nd Class and then, for his excellent work in the bow torpedo compartment, I awarded him the German Cross In Gold ("Speigelei" for the old salts here) for the sinking of the battleship. I awarded my sonarman the U-boat Front Clasp for his excellent work at the hydrophones, without which U-47 would never have brought such devastation to that convoy.

All four of my officers now have the rank of Leutnant z. S. after this last round of promotions and I'm beginning to find myself hoping none of them are transferred or given their own commands just yet. I'd like to keep my men for at least the first two Atlantic patrols that are inevitably coming with the impending move to Brest.

I wonder when I'll be a Kaleu in rank instead of just spirit? Anyone have a general rule of thumb as to how many patrols or what notable deeds bring about promotion to Kapitanleutnant? :arrgh!:

I'm still amazed at how well I'm doing with this career after spending so long away from SH3. Hard to believe I've gotten six patrols under my belt with no injuries or loss of crew and only very minor damage to my boat during my 4th patrol from a "wabo" that got a little close while I was dodging the other ten. :smug: