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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Seasoned Skipper
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: London
Posts: 713
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I inspect my young crew on the fore deck. One or two are looking pretty green in every sense of the word.
Last night was a massive booze-up. A lot of our 'Lordships' in the fore-ends are regarding me with bright-eyed confidence. We sank a destroyer on our last patrol with a stern shot from long range in high seas, whilst busily running away. It was a petulant parting shot, that somehow hit home A sheer fluke, but now they think I'm a genius Now I have to take them out again, and bring them back in one piece "Maybe the Hood or Ark Royal this time, Herr Kaleun!" I smile at the cheeky remark and send them below to patrol stations; the First Lieutenant has reported U-46 ready for sea, but there is still much for the CPOs to do Cast off bowlines, ahead standard both! Otto, my Chief, is the last to go below "Young pups!" he mutters as he lowers himself down the hatch This is his eighth patrol. A good man to have in a tight corner, and I'd be worried if he wasn't pessimistic everytime we went out, balancing the youthful exuberance of the hands I duck below the string bags of sausages and fruit hanging from the control room. The Quartermaster and Navigator are already poring over the chart table We're going back to the Clyde approaches, some juicy targets to be found, sure, but it's the Royal Navy's living room, and we're not terribly welcome there "Be ok again this time, Sir?" Our Second Lieutenant ventures a wink U-51 and U-107 have both failed to report in. That can only mean one thing. Good men, all of them U-46 begins to purr out of the bunker Back on the bridge I stand majestically as nurses wave enthusiatically from the dockside No nurse can save us now Only me Back below, the Second Lieutenant is checking the signal flares, and spare binoculars "Yes, Number Two, everything will be fine" I close the green curtain on my cabin, and hope to God I'm right... |
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#2 |
Samurai Navy
![]() Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Norway
Posts: 567
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Care to give some more operational details about U-46?
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I shall punish yee, landlubber! C'mere for spankings and popsicles! |
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#3 |
Gunner
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Pittsburgh
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Great writing....what got me hooked on this forum was interesting "action reports" by fellow members......whenever you get a chance, WRITE MORE!
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Ah......I remember when I was young and dumb.........now I'm just dumb. |
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#4 |
Seasoned Skipper
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: London
Posts: 713
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U-46 is a type VIIC with 7th Flotilla out of Kiel, it's August 1940, and this is our 9th patrol. We have the Happy Swordfish painted on our conning tower, the lads swear it brings us luck
Up to now they've been right. We've had a couple of narrow squeezes but come through ok so far, and put a bit of tonnage on the board. Mostly off Norway and north and west of Ireland. Two patrols ago we lost Ernst, our flak gunner, north of Scapa. Where did that bomber come from? No time to dive, but he stuck to his gun and nailed him. But took some tracer in the chest in doing so. By the time we got him below, there was nothing we could do for him. Certainly saved our bacon that time, but there are already signs we're not going to have it all our own way for much longer Last time out we bagged a destroyer in a running fight. The boys were cock-a-hoop afterwards, but as the Chief says, "That's one less to worry about, but let's not make a habit of it!" Now that our stubble-hoppers have the frenchies on the run, we're hoping for a move to one of the Biscay ports. For the seniors it will mean not having to make the North Sea run around the British Isles anymore; the boys are only thinking about the champagne and mademoiselles! We're on our way to AM53 now, a lively stretch of water, with lots of opportunity to get our feet wet! Hope to see you back in the Mess soon Lt de Bunsen, U-46 |
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#5 |
Seasoned Skipper
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Location: London
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U-46 limps back into Kiel
Four white pennants flap from the periscope, there is only one torpedo left in the stern tube. We are trailing a little diesel oil, the deck plating is ruptured, and the port side of the bridge and saddle tank is buckled Below amidships, wooden beams support the hasty repairs to the pressure hull. The last of the welding has just finished, and the bilge pumps are just about coping I have broken out a case of beer, and the crew are responding with their usual young bravado, but it's easy to see they are exhausted, and not a little shocked The patrol to the Clyde approaches had started well enough. A relatively easy passage across the North Sea, even pausing to dispatch a British trawler with the deck gun. One warning shot across the bows to let the crew row clear, then three into the waterline. "Nice shooting!" remarks the second lieutenant "Hardly the Ark Royal" is the Chief's laconic reply "Well at least there's no kippers for Winston's breakfast tomorrow" comes the cheerful rejoinder We hail the survivors, fishermen from Hull, and pass down water, food , cigarettes and a navigational fix "I wonder if they got an SOS off?" muses the First Lieutenant. "Don't even think about it" I growl, but we dive anyway to be on the safe side Later we pick up an unescorted coastal tramp. The sea is so bad it takes three eels to send her to the bottom "The torpedoes probably cost more than she did" grumbles the Chief. "We're running at a loss" I smile. Otto is only happy when he's pretending not to be We reach AM53 on the first of August, and start our search pattern across the approaches to Clyde. The weather is atrocious, and the lookouts certainly earn their pay "On today's menu is the U-46 house speciality!" announces the 2nd Lieutenant one evening in the wardroom. "Soup in the lap!" We take the boat down for a trim dive and to rest the crew Then the excited face of Hans appears around from the Sonar Room, his phones dangling from one ear "Slow screws, many, bearing 276, medium range, approaching!" Convoy! With a clatter of plates and cutlery we hasten to our stations. and I bring us up to periscope depth. Can't make out the mast heads yet, but Hans has given us a good fix. They're coming right at us We figure on a reciprocal course that will put us in a 45 degree attack run by nightfall, and blow to the surface full ahead both Alarm! A destroyer puts us down. We go into the cellar and rig for silent running. An occasional peek an hour later convinces me he has lost the scent. We blow again and move in. We get off a contact report but don't expect any help, as far as I know we are the only boat in this vicinity Flooding tubes 1-4 The big fat guys are right in the middle. The tommies are screening the convoy with neutral ships. But it looks like the nearest escort is the other side of the convoy The fox is in the chicken coop! And look there's a big tanker on the outskirts. "Flank speed, master sight to bridge!" We put two in her. She must have been full of aviation fuel. Went up with a hell of a bang A smaller merchantman goes down to, and we cripple a larger cargo ship, I think Alarm! We've upset them again A bit tricky, it's shallow here. Took a bit of a pasting but wriggled out the back of the convoy ok. A lot of cursing going on in the torpedo room as they struggle to reload. "Quiet, Men!" the coxswain shouts before realising he should be whispering himself! Come up again. The convoy is no longer in sight, but we've a fair idea where they've gone, and Joachim on the weapons desk reports all tubes reloaded. "One last go, Number One?" I ask, and then we're thrashing through the storm eastwards again in hot pursuit We get ahead and drop down When we come up, we're slap bang in the middle of them. Too close for comfort really. The range is too short, searchlights are playing everywhere, and our firing solutions are rushed. A couple of duds, one wounding shot, and one that glanced off Then it happened "Brace! Brace!" screamed the Watch Officer We watched in horror as a large cargo ship loomed up on our beam out of the rain at ramming speed The collision nearly capsized us, and certainly made a mess of the boat. With a great crunch we were hit full on, but the momentum of the merchant actually pushed us off his bow I didn't need to flood tanks, we were going down anyway We had serious flooding amidships, and every available senior rushed to damage control. It was touch and go for a while, but Otto managed to stabilise our depth, and eventually I got the report that all leaks had stopped At dawn we could see the big cargo ship we had hit last night. It was burning, but wouldn't go down. We had one torpedo left, but we were in no condition to mix it with any destroyers hanging around Time to creep home "That was a patrol and a half" murmured the Chief and then promptly fell asleep where he sat Lt de Bunsen, U-46 |
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#6 |
Stowaway
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Thats the moving one. Looking forward to get more.
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#7 |
Sonar Guy
![]() Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Indiana
Posts: 386
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Rollie?????
![]() PLEASE tell me this wasn't YOU! LOL ![]() "There will be one missing palace guard at the royal wedding. He has been dismissed from duty during the event after he used Facebook to publicly complain that the bride-to-be snubbed him." ![]() |
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#8 |
Chief of the Boat
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LOL
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#9 |
Seasoned Skipper
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: London
Posts: 713
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Nope, not on parade for this one, or even lining the route. I think the Coldstream Guards are up for it, I think the other regiments of the Household Division's boots would be too dusty at the moment. So no endless rehearsals, and boot shining and standing in the sun in a stiff heavy uniform all day. I'm so disappointed! I think I'll spend the day selling cold drinks and make my first million instead! Enjoy the spectacle though, lads. We Brits can still put on a bit of a Royal pageant.
RdB |
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#10 |
Machinist's Mate
![]() Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: up ur butt and around the corner...
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u just reminded me to conclude my own story "when the wolf attacks"
bravo bravo. U can be the script writer for the re-make of Das Boot or U-571
__________________
Weekends don\'t count unless you spend them doing something completely pointless. -- Calvin Miss Wormwood: What state do you live in? Calvin: Denial. Miss Wormwood: I don\'t suppose I can argue with that... The only skills I have patience to learn are those that have no real application in life. -- Calvin If you do the job badly enough, sometimes you don\'t get asked to do it again. -- Calvin |
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#11 |
Frogman
![]() Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Bridge of U-123
Posts: 300
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#12 |
Konteradmiral
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Location: Greece
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#13 |
Commander
![]() Join Date: Sep 2001
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i was trying to catch you before you went out on patrol...
if i had've... i would've said something like... so... they've pushed you out to sea again... ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() --Mike |
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#14 |
Torpedoman
![]() Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Atlanta,GA
Posts: 120
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@Laughing Swordfish....Great reading!! please feel free to report more.....
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#15 |
Seasoned Skipper
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: London
Posts: 713
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"That will be all Kapitan Leutnant"
With those words, the Great Man dismissed me I snapped to the salute, hoping that the CinC hadn't noticed the oil and salt stains on my white cap cover, and turned about smartly, pausing only to glance at the operational map busily being updated by some (very pretty) young naval clerks So few boats, such a big ocean The debrief hadn't gone so badly. My fault that we'd popped up right in the thick of things on the second attack run of course, and got the boat rammed. But we had torpedoed the Devonshire Rose, a 10,000 ton tanker. And that had brought a smile to old Doenitz's face. It goes down well in Berlin, I suppose Our Quartermaster, Willi, was more pragmatic at the time: "Less tankers means less fuel, means less bombers" without lowering the binoculars one inch as he scanned the horizon. The Tommies are starting to bomb Germany now, and he has a young daughter growing up in Hamburg I hovered around the receptionist's desk to file my report, but Heidi wasn't there; just some boot-faced old woman who sees a lot of front-boat commanders come and go, and clearly doesn't expect to see them again Not for the first time, I wondered whether it was better to have a girl at home or not. A lot of the lads just go whoring, I know. But I've seen Otto and the coxswain looking over cherished and well-thumbed photographs on patrol. The look on their faces is sometimes unbearable. But they're home on leave with them now, while I'm still here in Kiel overseeing the repairs, and keeping the kids out of jail U-46 is tied up, more welding sparks fly all around her, and dockhands swarm in and out The First Lieutenant makes his report: "Decking repaired , Sir. Bridge casing not as bad as we thought, but needs a couple of days. The 88 and the 20 both back in action. Port saddle tank rupture repairs in place, soon have it as good as new. Electrics fine. Pressure hull a little longer, the dock mateys reckon still about 30% damage. We have a spot confirmed with the harbour master booked for a check dive. New torpedoes greased and loaded and full provisions, fuel and water ordered. Fuel lines checked and functioning" "Thank you Number One. How long?" "Three weeks, Sir" A phenomenal effort, but BdU want's us back out in one. Big ocean, too few boats. "Is Kurt here? Wilhelm?" I name a couple of the other crew members who, drenched to the skin, got us out of our last jam "Yes Sir, working below" "Summon all hands on deck, please Number One" With as little ceremony as possible I hand out the gongs and the uboat clasps. Kurt is to pack his things and go to damage control school. I want him qualified before we sail again, if there's time. After all, he's already showed promise by keeping us alive, and he can always make a living as a plumber after the war We'll head for Konigstrasse tonight. First beers on the Captain! When I slump on my bunk back at the barracks there is a thick brown naval envelope waiting for me from BdU. Not sailing orders already? I shake the contents loose The Old Man doesn't miss a trick An officially stamped slip from CinC Kriegsmarine saying: "You might need this" signed *Onkel Karl" A brand new white cap cover drops into my lap...... Lt de Bunsen, U-46 |
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