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Old 10-27-15, 04:50 AM   #16
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He means if the germans had used fleet boats instead of u-boats the fleet boats would have been sunk.

Which is funny since the fleet boats had much better radar and far superior fire control. Not to mention more weapons.
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Old 10-27-15, 11:20 AM   #17
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I really don't like this conflicts and debates, it' s like The Yamato vs Iowa duel, everyone has it's own strong points, The american subs can Store more torpedoes, they are faster and they had good surface and air radar since 1942
On the other hand german subs could dive in a short time, and they could reach deeper depths, if I recall correctly the fleet boat that dove the deepest was the USS Pampanito with about 600 fts. While the German subs could dive up to 750 fts. Or more (about 228 mts.)

I'm sure they have a lot of other qualities but anyways I don't like your aggressiveness padi, it almost seemed insulting to me..
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Old 10-27-15, 11:53 AM   #18
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Originally Posted by padi View Post
If the american subs have changed place with the germans they were sunk on their first battle...
There was a meeting between an American Submarine and a U-Boat in the Atlantic. The U-Boat was blown to smithereens. I'll let you research that as you're the one taunting.

People who are right don't need to taunt. U-Boats had no meaningful impact on the shipping between the new world and the old world because there weren't enough of them, they were too slow, they didn't carry enough firepower to make them effective, they chatted on the radio like a bunch of schoolgirls with cell phones. The Type VII was a coastal defense boat designed in WWI, not updated, and then pressed into ocean duty for which it was totally unsuited.

The American boat had twice as many motors, had a much better diesel/electric system, actual food preservation and preparation, valving systems that made sense and worked much better than the German systems, they were quieter, they were faster both on the surface and submerged, they carred enough armament that it made sense to send them the distances they had to go to do battle, there were no jokes like externally stored torpedoes that could help any depth charges sent their way, the crews had much higher morale and resolve (there was not a single case of an American submarine unhurt and surfacing to surrender like dozens of U-Boats did), great enough range to cover their assigned territory and a design newer than 1915!

Padi that is a very incomplete list of the absolute superiority of the American Submarine over the German U-Boat. No, the Germans could not have won the war with American submarines. Submarines were not appropriate for German war ends and the type of submarine that lost the war was an irrelevant detail. Daniel Gallery would just have had to draw a bigger circle to kill them.

But the American submarine was absolutely necessary for victory in the Pacific. German U-Boats would have been as useless as a screen door in a submarine. The American S-boats proved that beyond any shred of doubt. They shared some of the defects of U-boats while beating the U-boat in underwater speed.
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Old 10-27-15, 12:13 PM   #19
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Where did you hear that the first encounter between a Fleet boat and a German warship ended with the American submarine being sunk?
Actually the Japanese ASW capability was limited, although they learned as t he war went on to be quite dangerous.

In contrast, the Germans had NO ASW capacity at all! Zero. Zilch. Nada. No way to hunt and destroy submarines. Their only defense was to hightail it out of there fast enough that the submarines couldn't catch them.

So it's another baseless statement there by padi.

The German U-boat campaign was the best Allied attack of the war. It alone was sufficient to ensure the defeat of Germany. Every man in a U-boat was wasted precious manpower that would have worked for Germany instead of against, had they been employed on land. Every worker who built and repaired U-boats, every ounce of steel, fuel, ordinance was one that would not contribute to German war aims. They were all working for the Allies and a fine job they did.
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Old 10-27-15, 12:33 PM   #20
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Originally Posted by Rockin Robbins View Post
The German U-boat campaign was the best Allied attack of the war. It alone was sufficient to ensure the defeat of Germany. Every man in a U-boat was wasted precious manpower that would have worked for Germany instead of against, had they been employed on land. Every worker who built and repaired U-boats, every ounce of steel, fuel, ordinance was one that would not contribute to German war aims. They were all working for the Allies and a fine job they did.
Ahem: http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?p=2349007#post2349007
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My recollection is scanty but Hans Goebler, "Steel Boats; Iron Hearts book should be on your required reading list along with Michael Gannon's Black May and the two volume: Clay Blairs' Hitler's U-boat War . Bottom line: is a wonderful forum dedicated to "died of a theory" emulation of a lost cause! ie That a 'Master Race' existed and offset war against the American/British combined navy was winnable. Strangely, the Fuhrer did not lie when he said "at sea I am a coward" the last place to be so when you are conquering a world which is 3/4 water....the German naval campaign of the two world wars was a political and military disaster...under both the petulant Kaiser and the Bavarian corporal...
Your right!
The deck-gun was a symbolic if impractical Arms of Krupp holdover of what caused the (2 phase) Great War of German Containment 1914-1945 to begin with. The Kaiser's "place in the sun" & colonial "Gun boat" diplomacy... and everyone villainously participated in it! Your right about the impracticability but SH's would be boring without deck guns, just shooting eels, and then we wouldn't have a nice submarine forum
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Old 10-27-15, 01:04 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Aktungbby View Post
Wow, that is one nasty hole in the side of U-505. But if you've read the books, Gallery's and Goebler's, you know that incident was a completely different incident from the surfacing and surrender of an essentially undamaged U-boat which was still full of fight and its capture and towing back to the US. U-505 had been repaired and had no hole in the side when Gallery added her to his collection.
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Old 10-27-15, 01:47 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Rockin Robbins View Post
There was a meeting between an American Submarine and a U-Boat in the Atlantic. The U-Boat was blown to smithereens. I'll let you research that as you're the one taunting.
I've looked and I can't find it. Probably my fault, but a link would be appreciated.

As for taunting, I took it to mean that US boats would be helpless against British and American ASW.

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In contrast, the Germans had NO ASW capacity at all! Zero. Zilch. Nada. No way to hunt and destroy submarines. Their only defense was to hightail it out of there fast enough that the submarines couldn't catch them.
Wrong. Plain and simple, wrong. German destroyers were equipped with depth charges, and active sonar (S-Gërat), as well as hydrophones. Several attacks were made on suspected submarines. Oil slicks were sighted on more than one occasion, but no actual confirmation. I'm not saying the Germans were anywhere near the Allies' capacity. They were in fact far behind. But "NO ASW capacity at all! Zero. Zilch. Nada."? Yes, they did.*

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The German U-boat campaign was the best Allied attack of the war. It alone was sufficient to ensure the defeat of Germany. Every man in a U-boat was wasted precious manpower that would have worked for Germany instead of against, had they been employed on land. Every worker who built and repaired U-boats, every ounce of steel, fuel, ordinance was one that would not contribute to German war aims. They were all working for the Allies and a fine job they did.
Sorry, but to me this seems opinionated and very much an overreaction. Of course that's just my opinion.

* M.J. Whitley, German Destroyers of World War Two, Naval Institute Press, 1991
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Old 10-27-15, 02:01 PM   #23
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Originally Posted by Subnuts View Post
A Type VII or Type IX would barely have enough fuel to make to make the journey from Pearl Harbor, to Japan and back.
I completely agree with you on the merits of the US boats and their purpose. I just wanted to point out that the Type IX had a longer cruising range than the Gato, and just as slow a dive time.
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Old 10-27-15, 02:45 PM   #24
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I completely agree with you on the merits of the US boats and their purpose. I just wanted to point out that the Type IX had a longer cruising range than the Gato, and just as slow a dive time.
Yeah, I'm not sure why I didn't remember that the Type IX had a greater range at 10 knots when compared with the Gato and Balao.

Let's assume that one morning in 1944, all the Gatos and Balaos in the USN disappeared and were replaced by Type IXCs. Yes, we'd have a boat which could dive slightly faster and had a slightly longer surface range, could dive deeper, and have a smaller surface profile. We'd also end up with boat which was two to three knots slower on the surface, carried 12 fewer torpedoes internally, and didn't have effective surface or air search radar. We'd also end up sending boats without a shower, refrigerated storage, air conditioning, or sufficient bunks for the crew, into humid tropical waters for weeks on end. Sounds like a bum deal to me.

The funny thing is, despite how "huge and yachtlike" the fleet boats were, the Bureau of Ships were designing submarines even bigger than the Gato and Balao in 1945. Two of their designs submitted in May 1945 displaced between 330 and 490 tons more than the Tench class, featured an extra pair of stern torpedo tubes, six athwartship tubes for anti-escort torpedoes, much more powerful diesels, and thicker hulls giving a crush depth around 800 feet. Of course, these designs were put together before the Allies had a chance to examine the Type XXI.

Sorry this is getting off-topic.
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Old 10-27-15, 03:01 PM   #25
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Old 10-28-15, 09:39 AM   #26
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Originally Posted by Sailor Steve View Post
I've looked and I can't find it. Probably my fault, but a link would be appreciated.
Actually the Germans lost 24 submarines to Allied submarines during the war. British subs knocked off the biggest score with 13 kills. Among the American kills, the last one was USS Besugo bagging U-183, Op Monsun boat, two weeks before the German surrender. The USS Flounder also scored another OP Monsun U-boat, U-537. Sub vs sub was very one-sided an favor of the Allies.

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As for taunting, I took it to mean that US boats would be helpless against British and American ASW.
Interesting. I didn't read it that way. That is a much more intriguing angle. The Germans made a huge mistake using U-boats in WWII. They sent their boats out into a sea completely controlled by the Allies, beyond the range of any air support. Therefore, with the American jeep carrier hunter-killer groups, no diesel-electric sub could possibly survive, neither German nor American. Even the Type XXI would have been doomed (if it worked properly, a fact never established). So as I've said before, American subs could not win the German war. Subs were not appropriate for their war at all. They had a key but it didn't fit the lock.


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Originally Posted by Sailor Steve View Post
Wrong. Plain and simple, wrong. German destroyers were equipped with depth charges, and active sonar (S-Gërat), as well as hydrophones. Several attacks were made on suspected submarines. Oil slicks were sighted on more than one occasion, but no actual confirmation. I'm not saying the Germans were anywhere near the Allies' capacity. They were in fact far behind. But "NO ASW capacity at all! Zero. Zilch. Nada."? Yes, they did.*

The problem was that other than the Med, Germans had very little area to run their destroyers in. The German navy was completely inexperienced in ASW and had no demonstrated capability. You can have a garage full of tools but that doesn't make you a mechanic. Not a single kill is evidence of no capability.

Edit: although they didn't sink any submarines, the only German warship ever to operate in the Med, the destroyer ZG3 did induce the HMS Splendid to surrender and its crew scuttled the sub. A quote from Wikipedia which proves both points, some limited success and no ability to use the 19 total destroyers the Germans deployed in WWII. Edit: 19 plus 22=41 German DDs total. The US gave 50 to the British before the war even started!
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The Greek destroyer Vasilefs Georgios was captured in damaged condition after the fall of Greece, then repaired in Greece with assistance from the Germaniawerft and commissioned by the Kriegsmarine as the ZG3 or the Hermes. She was the only major Kriegsmarine surface ship in the Mediterranean Sea during World War II, and she was involved in escorting convoys to North Africa and the Aegean Islands.
Hermes detected and depth charged the Royal Navy submarine HMS Splendid off Capri, Italy, on 21 April 1943, forcing it to surrender; Splendid was scuttled by her crew. Hermes was damaged by air attacks off Tunisia. Hermes had to be scuttled in La Goulette, Tunis on 7 May 1943.

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Sorry, but to me this seems opinionated and very much an overreaction. Of course that's just my opinion.
I must admit I'm never hesitant to share a room with a strong opinion. Maybe I just worded it wrong. <rewind....> How is a strategy of sinking ships of several dozen nations other than the one you are at war with, operating on a huge ocean with submarines suited for coastal defense only and of a drastically outdated design, consuming Germany's best resources and manpower in a submarine war that sunk less than 5% of Allied shipping possibly justified?

Put all those wasted resources into land based military capability. How many planes can you make with the materials used in a single U-boat? How many tanks? Machine guns? Keep in mind that construction of a U-boat took much more time than constructing a ****e-Wulf. Or a hundred ****e-Wulfs. Good thing this is Subsim, not AvSim! Think of the incredible skill and fortitude of the U-boat crews. What would they have accomplished on land? They were the best of the best in the German military.

Then reflect that without U-boats there wouldn't have to have been a war with America and the war against the British might well have been avoided too. Yes, this was all in the hands of a madman, but theoretically, without the U-Boat the Germans could have pursued more fruitful means of conquest. They would have had a much wider range of options available both militarily and diplomatically. That would have been bad. It's tempting to say it was a tragic waste, but mistakes in the pursuit of evil are not tragic but fortuitous.

And then there were the ice cream machines!

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Old 10-28-15, 12:46 PM   #27
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Back on subject, one American sub skipper was asked whether he wanted his deck gun mounted fore or aft. He said he didn't care so long as they put wheels on it so he could chuck it overboard.

Dudley Morton said he wanted his on the stern because the only use he could think of was last resort if the sub were being chased by a bad guy. Stern mount was the most prevalent in American boats.
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Old 10-28-15, 01:09 PM   #28
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And then there were the ice cream machines!
U Kant really hav a propr GEDUNK w/o an ice crême machine!
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During the Vietnam War all who served honorably in the Armed Forces were awarded the National Defense Service Medal. Because the medal was issued regardless of any service beyond making it through bootcamp, it was called a "Gedunk medal".
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There's something charming about this deadly leviathan of an organization making secret murder machines to cross a quarter of the world, and somewhere in the vast chain of decisions, a decision is made: these men must have fresh ice cream.
The one aboard the USS Pampanito...still works!
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