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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Electrician's Mate
![]() Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Springboro OH
Posts: 135
Downloads: 30
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I'm in the old S-boat north of Luzon, 1st patrol out of Manila. Clouds, precipitation, heavy fog, high winds for days.
Got incredibly lucky to find an unescorted merchant traveling alone --- and when I say "find" I do not mean visually. Fired blind from astern after tracking four hours on sonar, and incredibly got a hit. Finished with deck gun, sighting by the flames. Two days later, same storm, I'm tracking a northbound convoy which includes both high-speed and low-speed screws. Can't afford to ping for range due to the escorts. Really not sure how to approach this problem. If I try to pull ahead it will mean trusting my fix on their course, because submerging to get a fix will slow me down too much. Probably I'll end up firing a blind spread, hoping to hit something --- unless someone has a better idea?
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"Not all those who wander are lost." - JRR Tolkien |
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#2 | |
Seaman
![]() Join Date: Jun 2017
Posts: 41
Downloads: 18
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Bad weather is a gift from the Gods for sub Captains; you don't need sight - you have sound. Once you're in their path ready your torps and prepare for quick, sharp observations the moment a ship looms out of the darkness. Bad weather is difficult for you, but it renders destroyer escorts to almost useless - at least in the early-war vanilla game. Be satisfied with one successful hit per attempt; unlike the surface-dwellers you have the advantage of time. |
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#3 | |
Electrician's Mate
![]() Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Springboro OH
Posts: 135
Downloads: 30
Uploads: 0
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Accurately guessing the convoy's destination (Toko, Formosa) was hugely beneficial to the calculation of course and speed. In future storms I may just camp within striking distance of an enemy port for this reason.
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"Not all those who wander are lost." - JRR Tolkien |
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#4 | |
Seaman
![]() Join Date: Jun 2017
Posts: 41
Downloads: 18
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#5 |
Mate
![]() Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 59
Downloads: 76
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I'm experiencing a situation where rough water is actually a bad thing. I've stripped off the escorts from a 9 ship convoy. They travel in a tight 3x3 formation. Have done an end-around set up three times. Because the water is so rough, my sub is exposed as the swell travels over me at peri depth. With 9 ships so close to me, somebody always spots me and they do the headless chicken fire drill.
The rough water makes the deck gun problematic, not to mention the wall of in-coming ordnance from so many merchants. I'm actually having to shadow the convoy waiting for calmer water that won't expose my position. |
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#6 |
CTD - it's not just a job
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one video, one line... Gotta wait for the singin'...
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"...and bollocks to the naysayers" - Jimbuna |
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#7 | |
Seaman
![]() Join Date: Jun 2017
Posts: 41
Downloads: 18
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Of course, once I WAS in attack position came the second kind of frustration: underrun...underrun...miss...dud...underrun...dud. ..AAAAAAAAUUGH! ![]() chuckle - cheers! |
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#8 | |
Bilge Rat
![]() Join Date: Feb 2016
Posts: 1
Downloads: 27
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To avoid being spotted in heavy seas, you might try staying submerged a little deeper than periscope depth. Watch the sonar, then come back up at the last moment to attack. If you want to stay submerged (as much as possible), but the waves keep washing over your periscope, spoiling your aim, try manually setting your depth to shallower than periscope depth, or set it to radar depth. You'll be more visible but you'll have a better view. You can also attack from below periscope depth using only sonar. (You can't go too deep or the torpedo tubes will close - 100 ft? I'm not sure.) Once you have done it once or twice it's not much different from using the periscope. The easy way is to set it up with the scope at longer range where you won't be seen, then just use sonar to pull the trigger. The harder way is to use sonar to set it up. There are one or two video demonstrations here on Subsim (in the Skipper's bag of Tricks, I think), and also on YouTube. Attacking via sonar can be used to stay hidden, so they can't see you - but it is ALSO very useful when you can't see them, due to fog, weather, fog, darkness, fog, or damaged periscopes. Or fog. (It's really useful in fog.) |
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