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-   -   Problems and disadvantages with electric torpedoes (the early ones) (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=151804)

Paul Riley 05-14-09 10:20 AM

Problems and disadvantages with electric torpedoes (the early ones)
 
Earlier today I had my first engagement of my current patrol.It was a lone merchant heading east from US towards Britain.I was in the AL sector,about midway,and it was very dark.As electric torpedoes were the first in the tubes I had no option but to use them.I decided a close range submerged shot of about 500m would be my attack,and so I proceeded on my intercept run,as I was already ahead of him.One hour later he appears as scheduled and I prepared my torps.Speed was set to 7,range 5-600m,depth 3,impact pistol.I waited until he was at a bearing of just over 10deg in the PS and let fire.I don't really like to do this,but I watched its progress on the torpedo plan screen and lowered my scope.I watched in horror as the torpedo passed behind him,yet only slightly.
I was very disappointed with the torpedo's performance,and this was the first time I have really used these tortoise sticks,apparently for good reason.I much prefer the speed of the steam torps.
I immediately swung the boat round and headed north until on the edge of visibility,ready for another attack,only this time with the deck gun :damn: , i'll pop up in front of him and give him a warm welcome.
Can someone work out what went wrong with this shot?.My initial judgement was the poor speed,and maybe I waited too late to fire?,maybe it should have been released at about 20deg?Do we need to fire sooner to compensate for the slow speed? :nope:
If someone can provide me some info on optimal firing angles on when to release torps at certain ranges,especially the tortoise sticks,that would be great.

(I cant wait until the ETorps become faster like the steam ones)

Cheers guys

Synthfg 05-14-09 10:49 AM

Did you forget to open the torpedo doors (Q) as this can delay your shot causing you to miss

onelifecrisis 05-14-09 11:20 AM

Anything could have caused that shot to go wrong... anything except the electric eel! Electric torps are excellent, consistent performers in SH3. They don't get spotted by the enemy (the gas torps do) and the extended TTI is actually very useful as it allows more time to fire additional eels or to start your evasive manouvers before the first eel hits its target. Also, there's a stock bug on multi-speed torpedos which sometimes prevents the selected torpedo speed from being used in the TDC calculations (resulting in a miss) but that bug doesn't affect electric eels because they only have one speed setting.

mookiemookie 05-14-09 11:36 AM

The problem was definitely with your solution and not the torpedo, as the TDC calculates based on the speed setting of the torpedo.

BulSoldier 05-14-09 12:55 PM

Indeed electic torpedoes are much more realiable.The only advantage is the steam torps is near 50% greater speed and range over the electric aals.

Paul Riley 05-14-09 01:40 PM

The tube doors were open,I do this on my final leg into position before the target arrives.
Speed was confirmed previously as 7kts,and so I am expecting the TDC setting to also be correct.
I am convinced it must have been the firing angle of only 10deg.I think I should have released the torp earlier.I have fired perfect steam torps at 10deg bang on,yet this one passed just by his stern.
Do you agree the firing angle may be to blame?This of course is 10deg from perpendicular facing of the target.
Real gutted about that waste :nope:

Pisces 05-14-09 02:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Riley (Post 1101261)
...
Speed was confirmed previously as 7kts,and so I am expecting the TDC setting to also be correct.

Could you explain exactly how you confirmed the speed? Over how long? And what was the difference between periscope bearing and gyro angle at the time of fire, this 10 degrees? If you can remember. 7 knots target and 10 degrees lead suggest the TDC calculated the aim for a fast type-1 (7 knots target@ 90 AOB vs. 44knots torpedo= 9.1 degrees lead). A slow electric (30knots) would need 13.5 degrees of lead. Any chance you had selected a tube with a fast type-1 in it previously? Or else the speed of the target would have been around 5 knots (30*sin(10)=5.2). That is quite a difference, but possibly enough measurement fault if you used only the 3m15s rule.

AKULA_71 05-14-09 02:51 PM

The torpedo speed the TDC was useing was wrong. When you have mixed T1/T2 torpedoes loaded in the tubes the TDC never auto-sets the T2s to the correct speed when switching between them.

The work-around is when you go to the tube loaded with the T2 click on the torpedo's speed switch. That'll set the TDC to use the correct speed for the T2 torpedo.

Also, get in the habbit of useing all steam, or all electric, loadouts. Up until 1943 I like useing T2s in spring/summer and T1s in fall/winter. After 43 I stick with T1s and just do long range spreads into convoys with the low speed setting.

Paul Riley 05-14-09 03:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pisces (Post 1101285)
Could you explain exactly how you confirmed the speed? Over how long? And what was the difference between periscope bearing and gyro angle at the time of fire, this 10 degrees? If you can remember. 7 knots target and 10 degrees lead suggest the TDC calculated the aim for a fast type-1 (7 knots target@ 90 AOB vs. 44knots torpedo= 9.1 degrees lead). A slow electric (30knots) would need 13.5 degrees of lead. Any chance you had selected a tube with a fast type-1 in it previously? Or else the speed of the target would have been around 5 knots (30*sin(10)=5.2). That is quite a difference, but possibly enough measurement fault if you used only the 3m15s rule.

I used the 3m15s rule over a period of about 30mins,as I was level with him at 90deg and monitored his position in my scope for said period,he was steady at 7kts.The fire angle from perpendicular was 10 deg in the scope to target as I said.
Your 13deg sounds about right as it would give the electric more lead to hit the target.I was pretty sure just after firing that my firing angle was too late.Future firing angles of 15-20deg should still give me a good contact on his broadside.I just need to get used to the slower speeds.
I was previously unaware of the TDC using settings for fast steam torps instead of the slower electrics,that is pretty bad I think.How do we get around that problem then? :down::nope:

Thanks.

Paul Riley 05-14-09 03:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AKULA_71 (Post 1101308)
The torpedo speed the TDC was useing was wrong. When you have mixed T1/T2 torpedoes loaded in the tubes the TDC never auto-sets the T2s to the correct speed when switching between them.

The work-around is when you go to the tube loaded with the T2 click on the torpedo's speed switch. That'll set the TDC to use the correct speed for the T2 torpedo.

Also, get in the habbit of useing all steam, or all electric, loadouts. Up until 1943 I like useing T2s in spring/summer and T1s in fall/winter. After 43 I stick with T1s and just do long range spreads into convoys with the low speed setting.

My mixed torpedoes was,4 electrics in the fore,and 4 steam in reserve.I didnt have say,2 steam and 2 electric.I originally came up with that loadout to give me more flexibility during both day and night attacks on convoys.May be a bad idea.Probably better to just stick with a full load of what you feel comfy with.
Also,I always manually set the speed settings for the torpedoes,individually if that is to be the case,yet up to this point I have never used shots using torps of differing speeds.

AKULA_71 05-14-09 03:54 PM

I'ts abit of a bug with SH3. What was happening is the TDC was useing 30 knots (T1 low speed setting) as the torpedo's speed for the T2 rather than 28 knots. Even with the crew doing the torpedo solution it'll pass just aft of target, or at best hit the stern around the ship's rudder.

Just clicking on the speed switch for the T2 torpedo to be launched will get the TDC correctly set for 28 knots. I always do this, and confirm 28 knot setting with the TDC, when useing T2 torpedos out of habbit now.

Paul Riley 05-14-09 04:25 PM

akula

Thanks a lot for that bit of info,this perfectly explains what happened,as i'm quite certain my actual attack setup was sound

Cheers :yep:

RoaldLarsen 05-14-09 06:11 PM

Two things.

1) I was unaware that type IIs had a speed of 28 knots.
Wikipedia says 30 knots. uboat.net says either 28 knots or 30 knots depending on whether torpedo was preheated. All other sources I checked say 30 knots. I have never had a problem using the 30 knot speed asssumption for TIIs. Perhaps AKULA_71 is misremembering a problem with Falkes, or with resetting the speed after a G7a has been fired from the tube, or the problem applies in GWX but not stock, which is what I think Mr. Riley is using.

2) Firing at just more than 10 degrees should miss aft with a G7e at 500m on a small ship. The correct angle is 13 degrees. If you were not actually perpendicular to the target's course, or you had the AOB set wrong, the error could be compounded. Since G7e torpedos are slower, they are more likely to miss as a result of faulty solutions than a G7a on fast speed (the angular differences are greater.)

Paul Riley 05-14-09 07:39 PM

Roald,

You explained the problem just about as easy as is possible.It is that shift from 10deg release of the torpedo to 13deg that I find important.Naturally,I was too late in firing,this is what I have been trying to explain.I now need to find out when to release the torpedo at different ranges using electrics.I think the further out you are with electrics it gets a lot harder to hit something,whereas with steam it isnt as drastic.

Roald, just one thing before I go
Staying with the 7kt ship I was engaging
We now know the correct fire bearing was 13deg
What would it be for
1000m
1500m
and so on,upto about maximum visibility range?
THATS what I want to know.

Cheers.

Oh,I forgot,my last UBoat was sunk on the night of 2nd Nov 1942,as you predicted,yet not from planes.

RoaldLarsen 05-15-09 02:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Riley (Post 1101464)
Roald,

You explained the problem just about as easy as is possible.It is that shift from 10deg release of the torpedo to 13deg that I find important.Naturally,I was too late in firing,this is what I have been trying to explain.I now need to find out when to release the torpedo at different ranges using electrics.I think the further out you are with electrics it gets a lot harder to hit something,whereas with steam it isnt as drastic.

Roald, just one thing before I go
Staying with the 7kt ship I was engaging
We now know the correct fire bearing was 13deg
What would it be for
1000m
1500m
and so on,upto about maximum visibility range?
THATS what I want to know

Cheers.

Oh,I forgot,my last UBoat was sunk on the night of 2nd Nov 1942, as you predicted,yet not from planes.

When you are perpendicular to the target's course, the correct target bearing doesn't change with range to target. It will be 13 deg for any range. At target bearing 13 degrees, target speed 7 and torpedo speed 30, the gyro angle is 0 no matter what the range is.

A change to range to target doesn't affect gyro angle if gyro angle is 0.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Riley (Post 1101464)
Oh,I forgot,my last UBoat was sunk on the night of 2nd Nov 1942, as you predicted,yet not from planes.

Yeah, when it became obvious that the planes were not going to get you I had to send out a hunter killer group, along with some bait.:haha:


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