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#1 |
Soaring
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US carriers in danger!
Beware of the Huns coming.
![]() According to very few German media reports, U32 will set sail for rendezvous with the USN off the US coast to participate in naval exercises from March on. It will cross the Atlantic with just one stop at the Azores. The Americans want to see if they now can defend their carrier groups against submarines of the latest generation now. The Germans are focussed on testing a brandnew passive sonarsystem of theirs, and to try new tactics. Captain and crew expect to be completely invisible for every passive sonar the US can mount against them, they say. They are eager to repeat the success of U24 which in 2001 during excercise JTFEX 01-2 successfully penetrated USN Enteprise's ASW screen and fired green smoke next to the carriers hull, "at collision proximity", as the German article says. IMO, such exercises are of vital interest for the US, for the Americna side ven more than the German, since in the past the USN has experienced alarming weaknesses against modern submarines of new designs, with the Swedish Gotland having run circles at will around USN units for over one year when the boat was stationed in America by US request for longer practicing opportunity. With the Navy having rang alarm bells last year over a substantial loss of ASW in American naval forces, due to loss of air- and sea-stationed ASW power, and modern submarine technology spreading wild and turning Chinese and Russian boats more and more into dangerous opponents again, and European countries selling their equipment into the Middle East, the loss of capability in ASW indeed is a worrying perspective for the US, considering its new global centre of gravity is in the Western pacific. The exercising with the German boat will not be an encouraging experience for the USN, I strongly assume - everything else would be a very big surprise. The 212 is at least as undetectable (passively) as the Gotlands are, and also almost undetectable for magnetic sensors. Maximum time for staying underwater is rumoured to be minimum 18 days. Don't ask me, they gave no pieces on this new German sonar, if you wanted to ask for curiosity. Only that it is passive. And this boat the Germans want to sell to - Egypt. ![]() ![]() ![]()
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#2 | |
Lucky Jack
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The USN ASW has been penetrated at will for decades. Seems there are no improvements. Then again, keeping up with submarine tech and ways to combat it may not be completely possible.
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“You're painfully alive in a drugged and dying culture.” ― Richard Yates, Revolutionary Road |
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#3 |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Between test depth and periscope depth
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The advantage in ASW is decidedly in favor of the submarine. Surface and air units are good at prosecuting a submerged contact once found, but the problem lies in detection. A CVBG clipping along at 30kts, even 10 kts, makes a hell of a lot of noise thus putting the submarine at a tactical advantage. That's why a CVBG has a submarine escort positioned ahead of it.
I remember training with our own ASW forces. We were restricted in our water space and they were pretty much told where we were from the get go. Even then we managed to "sink" them and that was on an Ohio SSBN!
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USS Kentucky SSBN 737 (G) Comms Div 2003-2006 Qualified 19 November 03 Yes I was really on a submarine. |
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#4 |
Sea Lord
![]() Join Date: Jun 2005
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In conclusion: SH3 is the shizzle, yo. -Frau Kaleun Another negative about using your deck gun is that you are definately DETECTED, which has long term effects on your relationship with aircraft. -snestorm |
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#5 | |
Born to Run Silent
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SUBSIM - 26 Years on the Web |
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#6 |
Rear Admiral
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When they know where you are, it may be easy, during war, it take a lot of luck to get a course.
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![]() You see my dog don't like people laughing. He gets the crazy idea you're laughing at him. Now if you apologize like I know you're going to, I might convince him that you really didn't mean it. |
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#7 |
Lucky Jack
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Let's hope that the rules are deployed fairly, and U32 is given ample opportunity to prove her worth.
Good hunting U32! ![]() |
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#8 |
Sea Lord
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But as is commonly known, all of those cases have been, are and will be brilliant strategic decisions by the USN, which has appeared weaker in peace time than it really is and therefore cunningly fed its enemies false information and created false sense of security for them.
Source: the Internuts.
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Хотели как лучше, а получилось как всегда. |
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#9 |
Willing Webfooted Beast
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From the name of this thread, and the icon, I thought that Skybird was setting out to plant bombs on US ships
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Historical TWoS Gameplay Guide: http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?p=2572620 Historical FotRSU Gameplay Guide: https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/sho....php?p=2713394 |
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#10 |
Navy Seal
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Well, the USN hasn't really had a viable widespead submarine opponent since the end of the Cold War, and the lack of attention to that aspect of the training is beginning to show, as the rest of the world has caught up, and in some cases, surpassed us.
The USN still has a formidable ASW presence, but we don't obsess over over it like we did against the Soviets. |
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#11 |
Fleet Admiral
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Even our "noisy" Collins class boats were successful against both USN surface and submarine assets during excersices some years ago.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/20...222635806.html http://www.cuttingedge.org/news_updates/nz1839.htm Gute jagd U32. I'm sure the results will be similar if not better. |
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#12 |
Silent Hunter
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Our old navy sub, daphné class, was detected as a trawler in US sonars...
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#13 |
Commodore
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It's funny that now F220 Hamburg (AAW FFG, similar like the US AEGIS system) also travels to the east coast to join the CVN Harry S. Truman for 6 months - after some exercises they will be travelling through the Suez canal. (Info about the trip (German language)
So, the Huns do not need always to be feared off ![]() |
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#14 | ||
Lucky Jack
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![]() Quote:
![]() The Obies also manage to 'sink' a few US carriers in their time, and the Dutch, well: Quote:
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#15 |
Chief of the Boat
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I'm confident the German submarine will perform extremely well but in real life hostilities I'd expect a submarine would give a good hint to its whereabouts when launching a weapon and as such the battle group would possibly go nuclear (especially if a carrier were hit) which would mean less accuracy would be needed in said retaliatory response.
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