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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Subsim Aviator
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#2 |
Eternal Patrol
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I usually defend Wiki, and that article is fine. But, like all single-coverage books or pages, it is by nature lacking information that is available:
http://www.uboatarchive.net/U-570.htm There you'll find the complete British and American reports on the detailed examination of the boat. Much of the information used for various SH mods comes from this site.
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#3 |
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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Well this was what additionally helped Bletchley Park after the U-110 (Enigma and papers) to construct the "bomb", but also brought the escort crews to set their charges for deeper depths after realizing how deep the boats could really get .. bad for the U-boats.
Anyway it is an atrocity to make a film, call it "U-571" and introduce US sailors to having captured the boat ![]() Also interesting, on a british site you can read that "HMS Graph" was a Walther boat .. is it still all propaganda ? ![]() I know England tested a Perhydrol boat with astonishing results, but only after the war and with a german crew to run it. In reality this must have been the U-1407, or renamed to "HMS Meteorite". Greetings, Catfish |
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#4 |
Navy Seal
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The Brits also built a two ship class of their own design (Explorer class), and the Russians built a a test bed sub (Whale class) and a large class of LOX powered coastal subs (Quebec). The US planned to fit the last Tang class boat with a HTP or LOX engine but it was canceled.
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#5 | |
Lucky Jack
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#6 |
Fleet Admiral
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It would have made a far better movie thatn U-571.
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#7 |
Navy Seal
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That's what I keep saying more generally - I still don't understand why there are so many fictional WWII-themed movies that try to present something new and "unexpected" storyline, yet when one bothers to look at actual history, there are many far stranger and more interesting stories that actually happened.
Fiction's got nothing on real life - it's always stranger and more interesting when you dig deep enough ![]() |
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#8 |
Eternal Patrol
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It's like conspiracy theories. The people who believe in them will do anything to convince you, but if you show them a real conspiracy that was discovered, exposed and the perpetrators punished, they quickly lose interest.
Everybody wants a "good" story; no one wants the truth.
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#9 |
Fleet Admiral
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But sometimes the truth is a far better story than the fiction.
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#10 | |
Wayfaring Stranger
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![]() Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see. |
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#11 |
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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Hello August,
- hehe, touché ![]() But then in 1944 the struggle for decryption information was already decided, from Dolphin and Shark, to Ultra. Even the initial english boarding crews were more interested in getting the keycode papers, than the Enigma machines itself. Towards the end of the war the "bombes" in Bletchley Park decyphered any Triton message within 24 hours - at least that is what propaganda tells us today ![]() Greetings, Catfish Last edited by Catfish; 01-16-11 at 12:46 PM. |
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#12 |
Lucky Jack
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In the encryption battle we would have been completely lost without the Polish. They were well ahead of us in cracking the code, and thankfully they shared what they'd learnt on the eve of the Second World War.
Gordon Welchman: "Hut 6 Ultra would never have gotten off the ground if we had not learned from the Poles, in the nick of time, the details both of the German military version of the commercial Enigma machine, and of the operating procedures that were in use." Peter Calvocoressi: "The one moot point is - how valuable? According to the best qualified judges it accelerated the breaking of Enigma by perhaps a year. The British did not adopt Polish techniques but they were enlightened by them." The Polish Cryptologists are often overlooked but they were an absolutely vital part of the Enigma story, and they had a harder time of it than Bletchley Park, at one point hiding out in France and French Algeria and decoding on the quiet. |
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#13 |
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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