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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Formerly Kpt. Hess
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: 39.20 nmi from U 9
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Regarding hydrophones, I think the Brits were pretty innovative since they already had this technology in WWI and then later refined it to what came known as the ASDIC or active sonar. If I remember it correctly, it was even Rutherford (the guy who is famous for his nuclear research) who invented the hydrophone. Sounded a bit odd to me in the first place, but that's probably why I remember his name in connection to hydrophones.
Concerning ASDIC however the story is a different one. The British had improved their technology and had ASDIC even when WWII started - however it was still rather ineffective, had some flaws and was then greatly improved during the war - necessity is the mother of invention. However they gave this technology to the US for free when WWII broke out and both countries then conducted further research on that basis. Wouldn't deny though that the US had their own hydrophones by that time, and if not, they then definetly got it from the Brits. |
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#2 |
Stowaway
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The British developed the hydrophone during WW1, Von Hesse is correct, one of the key individuals involved was Nobel prize winning physist Ernest Rutherford. Rutherford developed a piezoelectric device that converted sound into an electrical impulse which could be used to create a visual trace of the sound on paper.
By the end of WW1 hydrophones had been widely fitted to ships as small as ASW trawlers and fixed hydrophone arrays had been planted in the Channel to detect transiting submarines. These were the direct forerunners of the Cold War SOSUS arrays placed in the Atlantic and Pacific. Contrary to popular myth there was no Anti-Submarine Detection Investigation Committee and the fiction that there was gave ASDIC it's name for the same reasons that tanks were first called Tanks, as a deception to camouflage the true function. See Hackman's Anti-Submarine Warfare in the Royal Navy 1914-54. I believe that the RN shared hydrophone technology with the USN from the winter of 1918 since the former got a big slice of the escort duties in the Atlantic. The first operational ASDIC set did not go to sea until 1920 or so. |
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#3 |
Engineer
![]() Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: FLA USA
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So the British came up with hydrophone, and the German use it against them?
Because Hydrophone had a longer range than Sonar.. so the German knows who ever is nearby than the Destroyer.... Specially in early years 39, till the Sonar pops up... Another question that i stated, what and how did the Americans check underwater when there is a ship nearby? do they pop the scope and look around every 30 minutes? Or they have there own kind of hydrophone, after all the British invent the hydrophone, and don't want to share with the Americans??? OT, I know Germany invented V1, V2 rockets, and rocket-fuel, and Jetplanes(Messerschmitt Me 262) And for the American lucky to bring over Wernher von Braun, to continue making rockets for the NASA.... |
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#4 |
Planesman
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Location: Control room
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Submarine in WWI and WWII was more surface ship with ability to dive. So all submarines was sailing at the surface and dive only when needed. I don't think they have other metod in WWI then scope and listen underwater sounds without any devices.
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Oblt.zS. Kurt Hanke, commander of U-83 (Type VIIB) in WaW 5. Patrol 1 - at sea : 5 ships - 10095 BRT My filefront mods link To Battle Station order mod for SH3 and more |
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#5 | |
Navy Seal
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Nearly all escorts you encounter are equipped with passive sonar/hydrophone, and they're listening just as carefully as you are. Just that the sub can generally afford to be a lot quieter than surface warships, and being far away from the "messy" surface waves does help clarity and range for hydrophone contacts. However this does not mean that surface escorts wouldn't be listening. Now, it's useful as long as whatever you're hunting is making a sound. As soon as it stops - you're kind of on your own there... Active sonar, on the other hand, can detect large objects irrespective of the noise they're making. These can be also mounted on anything, but for obvious reasons the WWII submarine is not best-advise to emit the loud sounds needed by active sonar to work, because they'll be picked up by those hydrophones that ASW ships are listening for you with. The submarine always has an advantage in terms of acoustic stealth, but not because of its hydrophones being superior. You can more or less assume that enemy ASW ships will have the same kind of hydrophones as you. It's mainly because the submarine is a quiet platform in normal modes of operation that you have advantage - yeah, you'll hear those escorts first, not because your "hearing" is better because they sail faster and make a heck of a lot more noise than you do. And there's not much they can do about that except outright stop. Which was by the way a tactic used by persistent sub hunters. Otherwise, at the start of WWII, hydrophone capabilities weren't too far apart between nations. These were a well-established technology, and at least on submarines, did not really evolve much until after the war, when passive sonar operation became a much finer art. The german U-boats maybe had a slight edge, but it was mostly because of the number and quality of 'mics' in their hydrophone arrays, and their cleverly overlapped use of two different different sets of sensors on the top and bottom side of the boat for listening (the GHG and KDB). Everyone else had reasonably good hydrophones available though, both for submarines and ships hunting them. As far as the Americans, aside from generally operating near the surface or on the surface, there were a few advantages they had. Firstly, US subs' hydrophones consisted of rotatable 'mics' mounted on the bottom of the sub. In theory, they worked on the surface, though in practice the sub needed to be both running slowly and in reasonably calm seas for that to work. Otherwise they certainly had listening capability approaching that of Germans. But the real strength for the American subs was their radar, which among other things could be operated from periscope depth. The US subs relied extensively on their radars, rather than acoustics, for detecting enemy ships. This is something Germans were far behind in, and unlike the US subs, U-boats never received effective radar capability in any numbers. |
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#6 | |
Stowaway
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Only US Fleet Boats could cruise submerged using air search radar (SD), surface search radar (SJ) and periscopes for target and threat detection, something not even a Type XXI could do. This in addition to passive and active sonar. The British did share hydrophone/sonar technology with the USN in the early years but American electronics made their sets smaller and generally more reliable. American Robert Goddard invented the liquid fueled rocket without which the V2 would have been impossible. Von Braun was probably luckier since the agency that he was responsible for made much use of slave labour from concentration camps. Had he not been whisked off the the USA he may very well have ended up in the Soviet Union or Spandau prison for crimes against humanity. A serving RAF officer named Frank Whittle developed the turbo jet engine at the same time as German university student Hans von Ohain. The German's flew the first jet powered aircraft but the British were close behind and Whittles' design was superior to Ohain's in many respects. The German navy's active sonar was inferior to the RN sets in most respects from the start but German passive sets (hydrophones) were first class. |
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#7 |
Navy Seal
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It's also worth mentioning that hydrophones were never a primary detection method for submarines in WWII. Everybody at the start of WWII relied on submarines to hunt down their prey by first spotting it on the surface, either by periscope or by lookouts on the bridge. This was especially true of the Germans, and all their successful tactics (most notably the wolfpack) relied on submarines being able to keep visual contact with their prey, without diving.
Americans pioneered the use of radar, and it was very much the primary means of detection for their submarines through the later half of the war. Sonar as such came into its own with the advent of true submarines after WWII. Once it became clear that subs would never be able to rely on being able to sneak up on a target through visual contact on or near the surface (because radars could pick up not only surfaced subs, but even periscopes sticking out) or radar (with the advent of effective RW receivers that would make sending radar signals towards your target as attention-drawing as sending loud pings of sound towards it), sound detection became the only viable means for them to work. Then things got really fancy with sonar, even though most of the basic principles of how it works remained essentially the same - it was mostly the depth and versatility of tools for analyzing sounds picked up by the sub's hydrophones that changed, along with ever-improving quality of microphones. However until that kind of sophistication made them important, basic hydrophones were really only of secondary importance to subs. |
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#8 | |
Stowaway
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The problem was that without the computer support for solving the target motion analysis problems that were developed post-war, the technique was theoretically sound but practically useless. As far as I know not one submerged sonar attack was successful, at least in the Pacific. |
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#9 | |
Navy Seal
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I'm sure many a useful contact was picked up by hydrophone first, too. But all in all, I think all successful uses of WWII-era large submarines capitalized on them being able to survey the surface by eyeball or radar. As soon as they were unable to do that (like u-boats were unable to do once the Allied radar got sophisticated and widespread enough), these submarines became instantly obsolete along with their whole doctrine. Attempts to work around that with things like snorkels were marginally successful at best. |
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