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Old 01-20-09, 08:01 PM   #1
Erich dem Roten
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Connecticut
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Default So how did a captain decide the tonnage of a sunken ship?

I'm sure that ID books could be used to get a tonnage estimate, but to write down "5083 tons" seems a bit precise. I mean, if it was an attack at night or in bad weather, unless they could positively identify the ship it seems like it would be a best guess.

Looking back to a couple books I've read recently about subs, including Werner's 'Iron Coffins' and a book about the U.S.S. Tang (Richard O'Kane's boat) it seems many times firing solutions were made quickly and under tremendous stress. How historically accurate are the numbers we see today?
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