04-24-10, 02:05 PM
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#9
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Admiral 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Brighton, England.Party capital of the south
Posts: 2,255
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Quote:
Originally Posted by msxyz
A real, forgotten story of luck and courage
At the end of 1940 the old Italian submarine "Piero Capponi" attacked a escorted convoy near Malta and became soon a prey to the convoy escorts.
After several hours of bombing the situation aboard the submersible was desperate: the batteries were exhausted, the depth charges damaged one of the propellers and the air conditioners started to leak toxic R40 coolant (Chloromethane). The last was a defect common to many Italian boats that costed the loss of several vessels and crews.
Even if the Capponi escaped the hunt of the escorts it was dangerously close to Malta and had to surface in broad daylight to ventilate the interiors, perform some necessary repairs and recharge the batteries.
Luck ran out when a destroyer patrolling the waters of Malta intercepted the surfaced boat dead in the waters. The Italian commander ordered the men to arm the machine guns used for point defense against aircrafts while a pair of torpedoes were readied, even if the British destroyer was approaching the submersible from an unfavorable position. The captain and other men on the sail climbed the rail and started waving the arms while a few sailors, hidden, finished arming the machine guns.
The British destroyer fell for this century old trick; it had been already used by pirates in the past and, in a more subtle manner, by the British Admiralty itself during WW1 with the creation of their "Q-ships" traps. A submersible, surfaced in the light of the day with engines humming and men hailing an incoming ship wasn't the kind of enemy the British were expecting.
The Italian marconist aboard the Capponi reported that the destroyer contacted its base at Malta signaling "a French sub" which was surrendering
to the British forces. As soon as the destroyer came close, the Italian sailors hidden in the conning tower quickly jumped to the machine guns and began strafing the surprised ship with a rain of bullets. Most of the British sailors on the deck and superstructures were caught by surprise and dispatched quickly. The radio operator frantically asked the base for help while someone was able to launch a signal flare.
Malta coastal batteries became live and targeted the submersible even if it was partially covered by the unlucky destroyer. The submersible crash dived after creating a smoke screen. Meanwhile the destroyer distanced itself from the submersible with the remaining men aboard manning the deck guns
A shell perforated the bow of the Capponi without exploding (leaving a neat hole in the flooded part of the bow) while another exploded nearby in the water damaging the sail.
The boat was now taking water from the damaged conning tower and the batteries were nowhere fully recharged. The captain of the boat decided to steer the submersible towards the entrance of La Valletta port. At the same time two British destroyers left the harbor.
The decision to head towards La Valletta harbor proved to be the right one. The submersible, still taking water, hit the seabed at 102m (beyond the maximum operational depth of the old, battle battered submersible) while the destroyers began a fruitless pursuit in the opposite direction!
Situation aboard was still critical, though. The air conditioner was still releasing toxic fumes and, even if the water leak was closed, surfacing now would have meant sure death at the hands of the angry British.
Finally, at 2230 the boat surfaced and, gambling on the dark, it was able to limp back to the base

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What an amazing story - thanks for sharing it with us
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