Quote:
Originally Posted by Grumpy Pete
(Post 2676701)
Are you early in the war? I think they get more accurate with time regarding depth. I just started playing again after about 10 years so I'm not absolutely positive about that.
Trivia info: At the beginning of the war u-boats were limited/ordered not to exceed a depth of 90 meters. They actually had no idea how deep they could safely go until a depth gauge malfunction occurred on a boat (don't remember which one). They were trying to get deep but the gauge was reading the same depth. A crewman cleared the problem and they were at 140 meters. The word got around and other captains began pushing deeper to get under the British depth charges. The Allies started the war with depth charges that couldn't be set deeper than 300 feet. It took them a while to discover the boats were going much deeper than that so they changed that setting in increments--450, 600, 750. I don't have great info on dates for the changes unfortunately. I once saw a picture of a Tear-Drop depth charge and it had a setting of 900 feet on it.
Edit: An interesting link for some info. https://www.ussslater.org/index.php
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I am not sure abou the depth they were diving I found this source
The theoretical crush depth of the Type VIIC was 280 - 375 meters, depending on which figures are used. Design depths from 120 to 150 meters are published. The Germans generally used a safety factor of 2.5 to get design depth and they tested the hull at a safety factor of 1.5. The maximum safe depth for the VIIC was therefore between 185 and 250 meters. The problem is that most of numbers published do not specify the applicable safety factor, so it is difficult to come up with a precise number for theoretical crush depth. The actual crush depth varied from one boat to another anyway since the quality of the materials and the workmanship varied.
BTW, there was a project for a VII C 42 which was to have a design depth of 200 meters using armor plate as the hull material. This gives us a maximum safe depth of 330 meters and a crush depth of 500 meters. Most of the other U-boat types only had a design depth of 100 meters, so their test and maximum safe depth was only around 170 meters, but many went deeper.
The Type XXI was designed to have a design depth of 135 meters, which gives a crush depth of 340 meters and a maximum safe depth of 225 meters. However, when the finished product was tested, there was a minor problem in the design which reduced the design depth to 120 meters, so we get a crush depth of 300 meters and a maximum safe depth of 200 meters, rather similar to the VIIC. The deepest test dive was to 220 meters.
Regards,
SuperKraut
Source Uboat.net
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