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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Watch
![]() Join Date: Jan 2021
Location: Calcutta,India
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So I was doing my usual patrols in SH4 FOTRS, then I suddenly got attacked by a G4M1 Betty Bomber(I forgot to turn on my SD radar). I recieved a hull damage of 83 and I crash dived immediately after shooting down the bomber. I was in a depth of 113ft and suddenly my Chief Engineer spammed with words like Compressor Damaged! Pumps Damaged! We have heavy floading! Etc,etc. I was surprised and checked on my damage and yes it was really serious but it was too late and I got crushed due to water pressure. But the thing is I was at a depth of 113ft only and still I got crushed, 113ft is like 35ft and that's quiet less. I am damn sure that if I was on a type IXC u-boat on SH3 (Because I haven't played the u-boat campaign in SH4 yet) I would have survived. So the question is, why did American subs had a very weak hull or a very less test depth in comparison to a uboat?
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#2 |
CTD - it's not just a job
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83 of 100 leaves you 17% of your hull protection, which tain't much... The US subs were rated lower than the German, but only from an engineering perspective. The U-Boats were tested for crush, and rather conservatively also, but the US boats were not, and the depth was decided by an equation someone had on a piece of paper, so if the paper said the boat could go to 600 feet (roughly 200 meters), then they said you could safely dive to 300 feet (100 meters) and be "safe". Ultra-conservative on diving depth. Crush depth might have been even deeper, and quite a few US boats did go below 600 feet - going by guess-timates, since their depth gauges didn't register deeper than 600. But if you take that 600 foot figure, and multiply it by 17%, you come up with 102 feet... death at 102 feet instead of 600+. Use 1000 feet instead, and that is 170 feet deep for death... That is one aspect of submarine warfare the submariners did not have though - a "gauge" on how much hull structure integrity they have left.
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"...and bollocks to the naysayers" - Jimbuna |
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#3 | |
Navy Seal
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Just a follow up, US subs could dive much much deeper than advertised, especially the Balao and Tench Class subs. Gato's went much deeper than their 300 ft test depth during war and even older boats such as Porpoise class went quite deep when forced to under combat conditions. I recall the Pollack went to 550 at one point, 250 ft test depth and a riveted hull I believe. They were sturdy, well built boats that could dive quite deep but for safety reasons, were rated quite conservatively in regards to max diving depth. Most of time they were not required to go quite so deep and some submarine commanders were not willing to push their boats that deep unless forced by flooding etc, others such as O Kane did, taking the Tang to 600 feet during sea trials and in combat due to flooding went to 612 feet I believe it was. |
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#4 |
The Old Man
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Sutton Coldfield England
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In Das Boot they went down to 700 meters - allegedly. I'm not so sure the Med was that deep off Gibraltar where they say they were
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> > Captain!, there's a destroyer on the por........ periscope is flooded Sir! > Darkness is only the absence of Light; Ignorance is only the absence of knowledge © www.worldwartwo.uk www.captainwalker.uk |
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#5 | |
Silent Hunter
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no WWII sub from any nation could survive a dive to 2296 feet. that's Hollywood.
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there are only two things in the world: submarines and targets. Fortis et stabilis et fidelis, semper ![]() ![]() ![]() ------------------------------------------------------------ Silent Hunter 4 1.5 Gold Edition on CDROM LAA enabled Dell XPS with 32 GB Ram running Win10 |
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#6 | |
Admiral
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Even if the gauge in the movie was slated as saying 600 (or even 700) meters.. as KM correctly pointed out... that's By Golly Bollywood for ya... anything for the dramatic nail biting suspense of movies, such as Das Boot or other action movies. ![]() ![]() ![]() M. M. ![]()
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#7 | |
Silent Hunter
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that is another bugaboo with me...not only with DB with the other (mostly American) submarine movies...this resting on the bottom. can't do that. a sub has too many pumps located on the lower portion of the hull, pumping in either direction, to rest anywhere but in the water. But it's great entertainment isn't it?
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there are only two things in the world: submarines and targets. Fortis et stabilis et fidelis, semper ![]() ![]() ![]() ------------------------------------------------------------ Silent Hunter 4 1.5 Gold Edition on CDROM LAA enabled Dell XPS with 32 GB Ram running Win10 |
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#8 | |
Navy Seal
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Numerous US subs did lay to on the bottom when damaged trying to make repairs. Tambor in Feb 1944 in South China Sea comes to mind, 17 hours was on bottom being depth charged USS Seahorse in 1945 off Tsushima Straits, was under 15 hours or so as well, on the bottom. S boat in Aleutians was sinking to crush depth hit a shelf, one in the philippines. Multiple other instances |
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#9 | |
Silent Hunter
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you go first. 45 second mark
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there are only two things in the world: submarines and targets. Fortis et stabilis et fidelis, semper ![]() ![]() ![]() ------------------------------------------------------------ Silent Hunter 4 1.5 Gold Edition on CDROM LAA enabled Dell XPS with 32 GB Ram running Win10 |
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#10 |
CTD - it's not just a job
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From the "reliable" Wikipedia for a Type VII:
Test depth: 230 m (750 ft) -Calculated crush depth: 250–295 m (820–968 ft) Very similar to the Gato figures, but the American boat designers were more nervous about their advertised "test" depth. Notice that the German crush depth is also calculated, and is very similar to the US calculations. Only the US used 1/2 of what they knew was a "safe" depth as the test depth. Think about it though, you are in a boat that is "safe" to 700 feet, and someone is raining depth charges and maybe a hedge hog or squid volley or two at you at that depth, and I do believe that everyone of us would have to change our shorts after just the first nearby explosion... Most submarine officers were highly educated men, most of them engineers in one field or another, and all could guess what the designers knew...
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"...and bollocks to the naysayers" - Jimbuna |
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#11 | |
Silent Hunter
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__________________
there are only two things in the world: submarines and targets. Fortis et stabilis et fidelis, semper ![]() ![]() ![]() ------------------------------------------------------------ Silent Hunter 4 1.5 Gold Edition on CDROM LAA enabled Dell XPS with 32 GB Ram running Win10 |
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#12 |
Watch
![]() Join Date: Jan 2021
Location: Calcutta,India
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#13 | |
Watch
![]() Join Date: Jan 2021
Location: Calcutta,India
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Last edited by A Soviet Fanboi; 05-13-21 at 08:33 AM. Reason: Wrote ft instead of m |
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#14 | ||
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Between test depth and periscope depth
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Quote:
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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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#15 |
CTD - it's not just a job
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Just be sure and retract your heads... lol - pick-up your feet!
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"...and bollocks to the naysayers" - Jimbuna |
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