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#1 |
Stowaway
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if im surfaced and in a big swell doing 10 knots and sometimes the sea is higher than the tower - can the sub be flooded and the men washed overboard?
thanks U57 - battling through Scapa Flow in a storm |
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#2 |
Electrician's Mate
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It won't happen. Apparently it's a hard coded thing in the game which can't be changed.
So your watch crew will happily take the plunge, so to speak.
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Den Tipperary song, wenn ich bitten darf ! |
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#3 |
Commodore
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Well, the sub would not flood anyway. Only the Canadian Navy is foolish enough to cruise on the surface with the conning tower hatches wide open
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My Father's ship, HMCS Waskesiu (K330), sank U257 on 02/24/1944 ![]() running SHIII-1.4 with GWX2.1 and SHIV-1.5 with TMO/RSRDC/PE3.3 under MS Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP1 ACER AMD Athlon 64x2 4800+, 4GB DDR2 RAM, 400GB SATA HD Antec TruePower Trio 650watt PSU BFG GeForce 8800GT/OC 512MB VRAM, Samsung 216BW widescreen (1680x1050) LCD |
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#4 |
Watch
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UCGeek --
My boys are often gasping for air, given the intensity of the storms that my boat routinely finds itself in the middle of. But they always manage to pull through! I know there was one incident of a U-Boat's entire watch crew being washed overboard during extremely heavy seas. No one belowdecks knew ... the boat just sailed along for hours until someone -- the next watch perhaps? -- went up and realized that there was no one on the conning tower. Anyone else recall the number of that boat? Captain Guitar |
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#5 | |
Commodore
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I don't see any such loss on the uboat.net pages, but I was skimming quickly:
http://uboat.net/men/men_lost-1944.htm <cut>? Ooops, I needed to slow down - U106, 23rd Oct., 1941 Quote:
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My Father's ship, HMCS Waskesiu (K330), sank U257 on 02/24/1944 ![]() running SHIII-1.4 with GWX2.1 and SHIV-1.5 with TMO/RSRDC/PE3.3 under MS Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP1 ACER AMD Athlon 64x2 4800+, 4GB DDR2 RAM, 400GB SATA HD Antec TruePower Trio 650watt PSU BFG GeForce 8800GT/OC 512MB VRAM, Samsung 216BW widescreen (1680x1050) LCD |
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#6 |
Watch
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That's the one I was thinking of -- thanks Seafarer! I recalled reading about it in Blair's books, but I couldn't remember the details. Or rather, apparently I remembered everything pretty well except the specific boat.
That must have been quite a feeling, being one of the replacement watch and finding that your conning tower had turned into the Marie Celeste. I'm fairly ignorant on war-era U-Boat procedures, but would it have been normal practice for the watch crew to strap in somehow in heavy seas? |
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#7 |
Chief of the Boat
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#8 |
Eternal Patrol
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Yes, it was possible for the watch crew to be washed overboard in heavier seas. Later on they carried safety straps, and if it got bad enough they would dive.
As for flooding, in a sea that heavy they would keep the hatch closed, which is why in that case no-one knew what had happened until it was far too late.
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#9 | |
Chief of the Boat
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![]() Who would credit it in the 21st century :hmm: |
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#10 |
Stowaway
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thanks for help - coats and hats all round then!!!
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