View Full Version : XXI-Bremerhaven pics
I like to take picturer, so here are those from inside the XXI
you will see that I have put three pics together
http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/9351/xxi18pk.th.jpg (http://img510.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi18pk.jpg)
http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/7276/xxi28sm.th.jpg (http://img510.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi28sm.jpg)
http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/7286/xxi31mc.th.jpg (http://img510.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi31mc.jpg)
http://img374.imageshack.us/img374/7919/xxi41xr.th.jpg (http://img374.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi41xr.jpg)
http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/7406/xxi57mt.th.jpg (http://img510.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi57mt.jpg)
http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/8251/xxi67zy.th.jpg (http://img510.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi67zy.jpg)
http://img510.imageshack.us/img510/7048/xxi75vs.th.jpg (http://img510.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi75vs.jpg)
Regards
Markus
Cool photos! Thanks! :up:
Perilscope
02-28-06, 07:48 PM
A glimpse of the passed… very nice!:up:
Where is this type XXI docked at?
AntEater
02-28-06, 08:17 PM
U Wilhelm Bauer (U 2540) is docked at some nightmarish 1970s concrete structure.
Adjacent to it are the other vessels of the nautical museum.
Of WW2 interest are the high seas tug Seefalke, build 1926 and the Whalecather Rau IX, which served as an armed ASW escort for the Kriegsmarine.
The museum also has the last remaining Walther Turbine of the world and a Seehund Midget.
The square rigger visible in the backround may be of some interest to US tallship fans.
"Seute Deern" originally was the Elisabeth Bandi, a 4 masted wooden Maine Schooner build 1919, but converted to a three masted barque in Germany in the 1930s.
The largest wooden vessel of Germany, but I think she has been stationary since at least 1943.
Bremerhaven is "Wesermünde" on the SH3 campaign map.
Average Joe
02-28-06, 09:09 PM
Very nice pics!
I want those antennas(?) and radar on my subs! :|\
Thanks for sharing these pics!
:yep:
Slick Rick
02-28-06, 09:59 PM
some great photos....thanx for sharing.... :up:
blue3golf
02-28-06, 10:07 PM
Great stuff! :up:
Crop-Duster
02-28-06, 10:37 PM
Very nice! Thank you! :up:
The galley on the XXI is very big! :o
Here are some more pics from Bremerhaven
http://img48.imageshack.us/img48/9194/xxi80vu.th.jpg (http://img48.imageshack.us/my.php?image=xxi80vu.jpg)
Regards
Markus
VonHelsching
03-01-06, 12:59 AM
Some questions to our German Kaleuns:
1/ How long does it take from a) Hamburg to Bremershaven b) Berlin to Bremershaven, with public transport (rail/ bus)?
2/Is the museum open every day and weekends? Operating hours?
Thanks
Gizzmoe
03-01-06, 05:39 AM
Some questions to our German Kaleuns:
1/ How long does it take from a) Hamburg to Bremershaven b) Berlin to Bremershaven, with public transport (rail/ bus)?
a) About 2 hours by rail
b) 3.5-4 hours by rail
2/Is the museum open every day and weekends? Operating hours?
The XXI and the other ships in the harbour can be visited from 1. April to 31. October, daily from 10:00-18:00.
SmokinTep
03-01-06, 07:23 AM
:up: Great pics......
Tonnage_Ace
03-01-06, 07:31 AM
Awesome pics, very insightful, but what were those tubes on that destroyer? Torpedo tubes?
Sir Big Jugs
03-01-06, 07:33 AM
Awesome pics, very insightful, but what were those tubes on that destroyer? Torpedo tubes?
Sure looks like it!
Gizzmoe
03-01-06, 07:44 AM
That´s no destroyer, that´s a puny little fast attack craft or patrol boat. I don´t know which class it is.
Sir Big Jugs
03-01-06, 07:46 AM
:yep:
AntEater
03-01-06, 10:02 AM
Thats Habicht, a postwar S-Boat build in the 1960s.
I dont know why they went to the american arrangement for torpedo tubes postwar (lighter?), but apart from that, these boats are still very similar to the WW2 ones.
Some other of this class still serve in Greece, but Habicht is reportedly in a very bad condition.
basilio
03-01-06, 10:04 AM
nice pictures!
Just one question: from the picture showing the torpedo room, I can see only four tubes...isn't the type XXI supposed to have six bow torpedo tubes?
AntEater
03-01-06, 11:17 AM
The armament was reduced postwar to 4 tubes, something which they didnt change when Wilhelm Bauer was converted again to its WW2 appearance.
Same reason why the whole automatic reloading apparatus isnt there anymore.
But U-Bauer certainly did fire its share of torps, since it was the trials ship for the whole german torpedo program in the 1970s.
If you wonder why it has a name, it is because in 1955-60 it was thought to drop the whole U- business and give the boats names like any other country does. Combat boats were to get predatory fish names (like the US, of course) like Hai/Shark and trials submarines were to be named after german submarine inventors or constructors. Wilhelm Bauer constructed the Brandtaucher in 1851 and the two Midgets were named after Hans Techel (chief Constructor of WW1 Uboats) and Friedrich Schürer (constructor of the Type VII).
In 1962 they finally decided to start the U- sequence again with the first postwar submarine. But there were actually TWO U-1s, as both U-1 and U-2 had defective steel hulls (antimagnetic steel was still in its infancy), so the boats were scrapped and the whole machinery installed in new hulls.
They actually carried on the traditions of "famous" numbers, like U-9 (number of the Weddigen boat) carrying an iron cross on its conning tower.
I wonder wether U-35 will get something traditional to remember Arnauld de la Perriere, but I think it would not fit today's political correctness.
basilio
03-02-06, 03:43 AM
Wow!
Thank you for your answers...very interesting post!
werauchimmer
03-03-06, 06:11 AM
The "ugly concrete structure" is a shopping mall, car park and condo in one. It is called "Columbus-Center" and it *is* ugly. Other interesting sights are the German Naval Museum, which has not only exhibits of the German Navies but of civilian ships dating back to the vikings. The Little Seaside Zoo is cool, too. My favourite is the German emmigration Museum, though. Retrace the steps of emigrants from germany in a very realistic and nicely done museum.
For a live Webcam go here: http://www.wsa-bremerhaven.de/webcam/index.html
(Nordwest Webcam is the one to choose)
You can see the Maritime museum in the front left, a sail ship of which I forgot the name, but it has a niiiice restaurant onboard. I recommend the Labskaus, if you have a strong stomach. On the right is the said concrete structure. In the background middle is the emmigration museum, left at the red-white tower is the zoo. The Type 21 is on the right side pier, behind the sail ships masts.
don1reed
03-03-06, 10:43 PM
Lovely, just lovely. I wish Mr. Peabody and his way-back machine could whisk us all back to take a cruise on that honey.
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