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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Gunner
![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Ill
Posts: 93
Downloads: 17
Uploads: 0
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Say hello to my "sloop" gun
I was trying to find a use for the 2000 rounds of amunition that was brought along for the AA gun on my type IIb sub. Since my gunners cannot seem to down a plane before it rattles this can to death...I think I can save the ammo the deck gun has on board for larger tagets, and get a few extra pounds toward my total tonnage.
"Say Hello to my Little Friend!!!" ![]() ![]()
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Silent Hunter III v1.4b GWX2.0 ![]() GWX2.1 ![]() GWX3.0 ![]() Uboat Commander 3.2 Life Boats final Torpedo Damage final Silent Hunter 4...more on that later |
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#2 |
Grey Wolf
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Depth-charged to Kingdom Come
Posts: 927
Downloads: 28
Uploads: 0
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That's what you get for joyriding in daddy's yacht in the middle of a war!:rotfl:
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#3 |
Seasoned Skipper
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Greece, Volos
Posts: 710
Downloads: 10
Uploads: 0
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That yacht could be carrying guns for the resistance, so it was good move
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#4 |
Medic
![]() Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: At the bottom of the sea in my VIIC
Posts: 164
Downloads: 0
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Doenitz: Ah Bernard what a relaxing afternoon, i never knew how peaceful the Dover Strait was in April
Bernard: Oh look sir there's U-43 Doenitz: Looks like they must have spotted an enemy ship getting the deck gun prepared and everything. Should be a good sight Bernard: Oh i agree sir 5 minutes later Doenitz: BERRRRRRRNARD
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U-2 sunk 1942 and then... U-96 sunk 1941 U-333 sunk 1945 by a B-17. U-43 STAY TUNED hosted.filefront.com/jpanzerj |
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#5 |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: High Peak, Derbyshire
Posts: 2,851
Downloads: 33
Uploads: 0
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Try doing the same thing with a 20mm flak-vierling
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#6 |
Navy Seal
![]() Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Docked on a Russian pond
Posts: 7,072
Downloads: 2
Uploads: 0
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Poor lil' sloop
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Espionage, adventure, suspense, are just a click away Click here to look inside Brag's book: Amazon.com: Kingmaker: Alexey Braguine: Books Order Kingmaker here: http://www.subsim.com/store.html For Tactics visit:http://www.freewebs.com/kielman/ ![]() |
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#7 | |
Rear Admiral
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Why waste ammo? (a couple old screenshots of my nefarious ways back in dec 2006. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#8 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
Posts: 4,254
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
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Wow.....
I don't even attack small vessels, much less machine gun people. I find it hard when I imagine some poor english fisherman out on another miserable Nordsee day, just trying to make a living when a Uboat pops up and blows him away. I didn't join the U-bootwaffe for THAT...
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#9 |
Rear Admiral
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But you didn't join the U-bootwaffe, your playing a video game; and the nice thing about playing video games is you can try stuff you ordinarly wouldn't even think about doing, or things you conscious would simply disallow in your day to day life because what your doing is not real, thereby having an entertainment value all its own.
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#10 |
A-ganger
![]() Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Michigan
Posts: 76
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
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I guess I see both sides on this one. Like Ducimus says it is a video game so you can try things you'd never try in real life. Personnally I would never shoot peeps in a raft, but then I never would have served on a Uboat either. For me it's the realism that makes this game so great. So I try to keep it as close as possible to what I would do in real life. On those rare occansions when I need a dose of pure insanity I get my wife to load up GTA 4 and watch her try and avoid people on the sidewalk.
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"Helm, bridge...what are you doing 60 degrees off course?" "Bridge, helm...coming back from 90 degrees, sir." ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#11 | |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
Posts: 4,254
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0
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![]() Quote:
Don't get me wrong, I have no desire to see anyone censor video games for things like that, and I do hold you in high regard in the subsim community, but I personally still find killing helpless survivors repugnant. It's just my opinion, I wouldn't judge anyone for doing it in a game. Perhaps I should have expressed that in the previous post. Thanks for reading!
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![]() I stole this sig from Task Force ![]() |
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#12 | |
Rear Admiral
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Now, there are only two recording "machine gunnings" (that i know of), in WW2. U-852, a type 9D2 commanded by Heinz-Wilhelm Eck http://www.uboat.net/boats/patrols/u852.html SS-238 (USS Wahoo), a Gato, commanded by Dudley W. Morton http://www.fleetsubmarine.com/ss-238.html (there are MANY accounts on this incident, and they all vary in details) In U-852's case, the captains claim was that he was shooting at the wreckage, because it would give away his position. Not deliberatly at the survivors. It also happened that the survivors of the ship he had sunk, were to be clinging to this wreckage he was shooting at. In USS Wahoo's case, the captains claim was that he was shooting at the boats themselves, and not deliberatly at the survivors, to make sure they weren't picked up anytime soon. Various accounts state that these boats were motorized launch's. (im guessing 20ft whaleboats or something). Both very similar incidents, for similar reasons. Now put these two incidences in context to the backdrop to which they occured. In the atlantic, sailors on ships were generally merchant marines. Civillian sailors doing what they probably normally would have been doing in peace time, with the added "bonus" of having their ship shot out from under them, being instantly incinerated in a fiery explosion, being burned alive by burning fuel oil, or just plan ole dehydration, the list goes on. But generally speaking, they were not combatants from the get go, and there were rules of engagement that existed. So the morality was rather crystal clear from the get go. Now, in the pacific, there were no rules of engagement, at least, non that the Japanese would adhere to. The merchant marine according to once source ive read, is acutally under the umbrella of the Imperial Japanese Navy. So from a technical standpoint, they're all combatants. Just a minor technicallity, that holds no meaning except for legal wrangling. But also consider the enemy being fought here. To quote one Survivor of japanese captivity, a guard asked him, "What's the geneva convention?", The japanese tended to prefer to take no prisoners, and would sooner choose death over surrender - preferbly taking out as many allied troops as they could beforehand. They were culturally different on every concievable level, and had no problem playing "head hockey" with POW's in order to improve their sword stroke. Now consider that these motorized launch's from a troop transport you just sunk contain troops that are on their way to reinforce a japanese garrision. In short, they are on their way to kill U.S Marines. Considering the amount of nearby islands, they will more then likey make it to their destination regardless if their transport was sunk or not. So then, you have a choice. Do you make sure they never reach their destination and possibly save American lives? Or will you still hold that making sure these troops never make it to their destination repugnant because their in lifeboats? I'll bet, at the very least, you'd consider blasting those boats from the water. |
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