warspite1
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Joined: 2/2/2008 From: England Status: offline
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Mike Dubost has been assisting with the US submarine write-ups (much thanks Mike). Please see two examples. The first is the slightly revised Nautilus (taking into account Midway) and the second is the USS Tench. Two more examples to follow in due course for the usual comment. [4261 Submarine - by Mike Dubost] .P These World In Flames counters represent a number of submarines rather than any specific individual submarine. The dates printed on the back of the counters do not relate in any meaningful way with build dates for the various classes of United States Navy (USN) submarine class and therefore the counter date in most cases should be ignored. These US submarine write-ups contain the usual technical data, followed by a brief history of one or more submarines from each of the main classes that saw action during the Second World War. .P When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, the USN had a total of one hundred and eleven large and medium submarines, of which fifty-five large and eighteen of the medium type were assigned to the Pacific and Asiatic Fleets. There were a further seventy-seven under construction. The average large fleet submarine had a displacement of around fifteen hundred tons, while the smaller S-boats had displacements of approximately one thousand tons, and the largest fleet submarine displaced around two thousand seven hundred tons. .P At the time of the outbreak of war in Europe, the US was a signatory to the London Naval Treaty of 1930, which prohibited unrestricted submarine warfare (Article 22 required attackers to first place passengers, crew, and ship’s papers in “a place of safety”). USN sub doctrine therefore emphasized attacks on capital ships, especially battlecruiser types and larger. On the 7th December, the day of the attack on Pearl Harbor, the USN concluded that the survival of the US was at risk in the war, and consequently ordered the use of unrestricted air and submarine warfare. According to Samuel Eliot Morison, combat vessels were still considered prime targets, but attacks on merchant ships were of major importance. .P Unlike German U-boats which operated in so-called wolf-packs for greater effectiveness, US submarines typically operated alone, due in part to the large distances which had to be covered from their few bases. US submarines would usually attack while submerged, using periscope observations to gather the data to input into the mechanical targeting computer. .P Initially, US torpedoes were defective. However, once the torpedo faults were corrected, US submarines became very effective attackers. Nearly one third of Japanese combat vessels lost were due to the submarine service, as well as nearly two thirds of Japanese merchant losses. .P .P This write-up looks at the two-ship Narwhal-class. This class provided two of the eight submarines that, together, were known as the V-class. The "V-class" contained four individual classes of submarine that were completed between 1924 and 1934. They were designed to perform a variety of roles in the vast Pacific Ocean areas. .P The Narwhals were large, cruiser submarines. They would prove to be the largest submarines built by the USN until the construction of the first nuclear submarines. They were fitted with six torpedo tubes and a pair of six-inch deck guns. The larger size needed for a second deck gun meant that this class was easier to detect and with clumsier handling, although they were faster on the surface than the older S-boats. .P Four additional torpedo tubes were fitted in the early forties and they also received a change in propulsion unit, moving to a diesel-electric unit to try and cure the poor reliability problems suffered pre-war. .P This write-up specifically looks at the USS Nautilus. .P .B Name: USS Nautilus .B Engine(s) output: 5,633 hp (Surfaced) 1,600 hp (Submerged) .B Top Speed: 17.44 knots (Surfaced), 8 knots (Submerged) .B Main armament: 6 x 21-inch torpedo tubes and 2 x 6-inch (152mm) gun .B Displacement (Fully Submerged): 3,960 tons .B Diving Depth: 300 ft .P USS Nautilus was launched in March 1930 at Mare Island Naval Shipyard in San Francisco Bay and completed four months later. She completed a total of fourteen war patrols, stretching from Midway to the Solomon Islands to the Kurile Islands. .P On her first war patrol in June 1942, Nautilus participated in the battle of Midway, during which she was commanded by Lt-Cdr Brockman. She located the carriers of Vice-Admiral Nagumo`s Kido Butai early on the 4th June and sought to attack the enemy. Although she never got close enough to make an attack on a carrier during the morning, she did manage to fire off a torpedo at Nagara, one of the escorting cruisers. This had the effect of bringing a destroyer, Arashi, on the scene, and from around 0900hrs until just before 1000hrs, Arashi and Nautilus fought a game of cat and mouse as the destroyer tried to sink the American submarine with depth charges. Although Arashi was unsuccessful in this task, she did at least manage to keep Nautilus from engaging the carriers. .P Having survived the attack, Nautilus was indirectly to make a significant impact on the course of the battle. Having failed to sink Nautilus, Arashi`s captain sought to return to Nagumo`s fleet, now some distance away. As she closed on Nagumo`s fleet she was spotted and tracked by USS Enterprise`s dive-bomber group, led by Lt-Cdr McClusky. Unknowingly, Arashi led McClusky straight to the carriers she was trying to protect - with dire consequences for the Kido Butai (see USS Yorktown for the story of the battle). .P After three of Kido Butai`s carriers had been mortally damaged by dive-bombers from Yorktown and Enterprise, they remained afloat for many hours while fire took control and ultimately destroyed each vessel. In the early afternoon, Brockman came across the stationary Kaga. Nautilus finally had the opportunity to sink a Japanese carrier. Unfortunately, the one torpedo that hit, failed to explode and instead of sinking Kaga, suddenly Nautilus was assaulted from all angles by the carrier`s escorts. Once again Nautilus found herself in a life and death struggle and once again she survived her ordeal; escaping with light damage from nearby depth charge explosions. .P Towards the end of her first patrol, Nautilus achieved further success while patrolling off the Japanese coast. On the 25th June she found the destroyer Yamakaze, while the latter was sailing alone and returning to the Inland Sea. Nautilus managed to torpedo and sink the destroyer. .P Her second war patrol was the raid on Makin in August 1942 (see USS Argonaut). Following this, she undertook three further patrols between September 1942 and April 1943 that netted seven merchant ships sunk. In the last of these three patrols she took carried troops for landings on Attu. .P Her sixth war patrol began in September 1943 and was a photo-reconnaissance mission to the Gilbert Islands prior to the invasion of Tarawa. For her seventh war patrol, she was sent back to gather last-minute surf and weather readings. During this mission, she was struck by friendly fire from the destroyer Ringgold. Despite significant damage to the conning tower, she was repaired and successfully completed the mission. .P Subsequent patrols saw her in the southwest Pacific, operating off the Philippines. During her thirteenth war patrol, she was called upon to destroy the US submarine Darter, which had run aground on a reef and could not be recovered. Efforts to keep the submarine out of enemy hands by destroying her with torpedoes failed due to the shallow water around the reef, so the 6-inch deck guns of the Nautilus were used to accomplish the task. .P After completing her fourteenth war patrol, Nautilus was sent back to the US to be decommissioned. .P USS Nautilus was scrapped in November 1945. [4262 Submarine - by Mike Dubost] .P These World In Flames counters represent a number of submarines rather than any specific individual submarine. The dates printed on the back of the counters do not relate in any meaningful way with build dates for the various classes of United States Navy (USN) submarine class and therefore the counter date in most cases should be ignored. These US submarine write-ups contain the usual technical data, followed by a brief history of one or more submarines from each of the main classes that saw action during the Second World War. .P When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, the USN had a total of one hundred and eleven large and medium submarines, of which fifty-five large and eighteen of the medium type were assigned to the Pacific and Asiatic Fleets. There were a further seventy-seven under construction. The average large fleet submarine had a displacement of around fifteen hundred tons, while the smaller S-boats had displacements of approximately one thousand tons, and the largest fleet submarine displaced around two thousand seven hundred tons. .P At the time of the outbreak of war in Europe, the US was a signatory to the London Naval Treaty of 1930, which prohibited unrestricted submarine warfare (Article 22 required attackers to first place passengers, crew, and ship’s papers in “a place of safety”). USN sub doctrine therefore emphasized attacks on capital ships, especially battlecruiser types and larger. On the 7th December, the day of the attack on Pearl Harbor, the USN concluded that the survival of the US was at risk in the war, and consequently ordered the use of unrestricted air and submarine warfare. According to Samuel Eliot Morison, combat vessels were still considered prime targets, but attacks on merchant ships were of major importance. .P Unlike German U-boats which operated in so-called wolf-packs for greater effectiveness, US submarines typically operated alone, due in part to the large distances which had to be covered from their few bases. US submarines would usually attack while submerged, using periscope observations to gather the data to input into the mechanical targeting computer. .P Initially, US torpedoes were defective. However, once the torpedo faults were corrected, US submarines became very effective attackers. Nearly one third of Japanese combat vessels lost were due to the submarine service, as well as nearly two thirds of Japanese merchant losses. .P .P This write-up looks at the Tench-class. This class consisted of a series of Fleet Submarines designed by the USN during the Second World War. They were an improvement of the preceeding Gato-class. They were slightly larger than the Gatos with an improved internal layout. The Tench-class was also built more strongly to allow deeper dives, adding an extra 100 feet to the test depth in comparison to the Gatos. .P Initial plans called for a total of one hundred and forty-six boats to be built, but the majority were cancelled in the final year of the war. A total of thirty-one were commissioned between 1944 and 1951. .P This write-up looks specifically at USS Tench. .P .B Name: USS Tench .B Engine(s) output: 5,400 hp (Surfaced) 2,740 hp (Submerged) .B Top Speed: 20.25 knots (Surfaced), 8.75 knots (Submerged) .B Main armament: 10 x 21-inch torpedo tubes and 1 x 5-inch (127 mm) gun .B Displacement (Fully Submerged): 2,440 tons .B Diving Depth: 400 ft .P The name ship of the Tench-class was launched in July 1944 at the Portsmouth Navy Yard in New Hampshire, and completed in October 1944. The submarine’s sponsor was Lady Bird Johnson, whose husband Lyndon Johnson, was to become President in the 1960`s. .P After a brief training period Tench began her first war patrol from Pearl Harbor on 7th of February 1945. After refueling at Saipan, she joined three other submarines to form a wolf pack. The wolf pack rotated duties in anti-shipping, weather-reporting, photo-reconnaissance, and air-sea rescue. During her first stint on rescue duties, she responded to a report of a dye marker seen near Akune in Kyushu. Entering the shallow bay, she found the reported dye marker was just a reflection from a shoal area, and was exiting the bay on the surface, in water too shallow to dive. A sighting by enemy aircraft gave her crew a scare, but they turned out to be from a US carrier aircraft returning from an attack on Nagasaki. .P On 3rd of April, Tench was spotted by a Japanese aircraft and forced to spend the majority of the day submerged. On this patrol, Tench was ordered to serve as a part of the submarine picket force watching for a possible sortie by the IJN heavy surface forces in response to the invasion of Okinawa. Tench was positioned on the west coast of Japan and so failed to intercept the battleship Yamato and her small task force as it sailed through the eastern exit of the Inland Sea. After the USS Threadfin sighted Yamato, and the picket line was dispersed, Tench sailed for Guam. .P On her second war patrol, Tench patrolled Japanese shipping lanes between the Kurile Islands. Her first contact with Japanese shipping on this patrol was the sighting of a periscope, and Tench evaded the enemy submarine. In several successful attacks, Tench sank a number of freighters and tankers, while dodging enemy anti-submarine forces. During this time, Tench’s closest call was with one of her own torpedoes that circled back towards the submarine. Tench was unable to evade the torpedo, but it ran deep enough to pass under her stern. On the 16th June, she set course for Midway, so ending her second patrol. .P Her third and final war patrol took Tench to the East China Sea. During this patrol, Tench only attacked ships too small to be credited as kills. She did take the Korean crew of a lugger as prisoners, but shortly released them in a small boat off the Korean coast. After releasing the prisoners, Tench conducted shore bombardment against Osei To, a small island off the western coast of Korea. Her final action occurred on the 9th August when two Japanese planes dropped bombs near her, but without causing her damage. .P Tench remained on patrol station until the 28th August and then returned to New London, Connecticut. .P USS Tench was scrapped in 1973.
< Message edited by warspite1 -- 3/5/2010 9:07:06 AM >
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