U-522 last patrol
This is the patrol report of the 27th patrol of U-522
1. Overall situation http://img151.imageshack.us/img151/8929/patrol273.jpg 2. Patrol report page 1/2 http://img98.imageshack.us/img98/3651/patrol27.jpg 3. Patrol report page 2/2 http://img11.imageshack.us/img11/1589/patrol271.jpg I don't know how lucky I was during this patrol (realism 100%) (with a little cheat to have the external camera for screenshots) It is the first time I make it so far at that realism. |
Well another evening of play and the fog and rain ahve gone.. but i still have 10m a second winds.
I found a convoy at last but its going to be very hard attacking with the sea in this state. DAMN YOU POSEIDON! :nope: |
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No Bernard on your boat! |
Walter Suhr aboard U-93 has just arrived in Kiel after completing her second patrol (Albeit at 2:15am R/L Time! I'm NUTS!! :haha:)
Crew are going to rest now but a full report will be submitted to BDU in the morning once we've all had sleep! |
Let us not forget all those times I forgot to lower my periscope. :yeah:
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We departed kiel on March 16th with orders to patrol grid AM78. Some four days later (20/3/1941), off the coast of Scappa Flow we encountered an enemy task force. Identified one ship only, that being a Nelson class. Unable to tell which of the two ships it was, either HMS Nelson/HMS Rodney. Three torpedoes are fired, scoring two hits on the Nelson Class BB, And one which either missed and detonated the sea, or scored a hit on a ship behind. (suspect the group was made of up three battleship classes with destroyer escort) Was unable to do any further ident's due to restricted visibility and the counter-attack from destroyers. Ordered diving to 70 meters. Over the next few hours we varied our depth between 30 meters and 80 meters before settling down at an aproximate depth of 115 meters. Sat in silence with zero speed and nothing running. Recieved only one more attack at just gone 1am. Next two hours are quiet. Scope-man reports DD heading away. Periscope depth ordered. Visual sweep shows nothing in site. Proceeded to surface the vessel and continue towards intended patrol grid as Task Force are long gone and chance for secondary attack long lost due to DD interception. March 24-26; Arrive upon patrol grid and successfully remain in grid for 24hrs as required. March 26-28; Ran north upto AM52-53 grids to begin short patrol. Awoke on morning of 27th to crew in cracking mood. Proceeding to the bridge an hour later just gone 8am with mug in hand I discover the reason; We are persuing a small freighter. As we have nothing in the logs yet for two patrols, decided to fire upon the small vessel using one magnetic torpedo. Torpedo detonates on target. Target continues with course, with Bow dragging into the water. An hr later she is beginning to sink. Surface the vessel is ordered and we finish her off with the deck gun to ensure credit goes to us & not the sea. March 28th: Brief excursion into AM53. Could only patrol grid for a short time as worries are beginning to creep in with fuel; Navigator reporting we have only 4000km left with engines at standard speed configuration with aproximately another 2km to run back to home-base. Enemy destroyer spotted. Ordered a crash-dive to 70meters, and then down to 120meters. Sat out for another 2hrs - enemy passes. March 31st; Had gone round outskirts of scappa flow and are just off the coast of Shetland, decided to have a look in at Lerwick. On the outskirts of the area, are spotted running on the surface at night by a DD. Noticed the bow of the enemy in direct course to us. Turned U-93 to a direct head-on course and fired one torpedo set for 2.5m below keel with magnetic fuse. Very lucky, succesful detonation and the DD broke-up a few minutes later. Decided I didn't like the vibe of the place and aborted my desiscion to look onto a possible raid. Returned to base on low fuel some four days later. Patrol Results U-Boat No: U-93 U-Boat Type: VIIC U-Boat Skipper: Kln. Walter Suhr Grid Alloted: AM78 (Succesfully patrolled) Ships Sunk: 2 Ship types Sunk: 2 1x Destroyer 1x Small Freighter Crew Losses: 0 (6 Transferred upon arrival @ Kiel by Kaluen Request; due to over allocation of Staff by BDU) Patrol Tonnage: 3919 Tons No of Completed Patrols: 2 |
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2) You're driving too fast if you're running out of fuel so soon. I feel your pain with the BB. Nothing worse than watching your knights cross sail away while you're stuck at 120m dodging depth charges. |
September 18, 1940 - October 10, 1940.
Type IXB, U-127. Commanded by Kptlt. Todlich. Based in Lorient. On October 6, ran across a convoy rather unexpectedly about 200 km west of Gibraltar. Sank a Fiji-class cruiser, four dud torpedoes. Ran into another convoy under attack by two VIIB and three IXB. Our losses were heavy; three freighters sunk, two escorts damaged. Five u-boats lost. Sank a large merchant, five duds. Continued to patrol east and west of Gibraltar, making use of torpedoes and all deck emplacements. Lots of smaller fry and one destroyer sunk. Headed home on the 12th with three torpedoes left, no 10.5cm shells and 50% fuel. The band played Der Alte Dessauer as I pulled in. Thirteen ships sunk for a total of 53,551 tons. |
Managed to sneak into Gibraltar, but I must have been spotted in my approach because the whole harbour was searching the seas (though all the ASW ships were WAY wrong on my location :D ) So I lined up a quick stern shot at a medium merchantman and took the snapshot before diving as deep as the harbor would allow and sneaking away....
currently creeping out of the harbour, with a confirmed kill for a single torpedo, and a quick 'scope check showed an additional fire somewhere the other side of the harbour..... methinks an ASW trawler may have stepped on it's own depth charge :D |
REALISM: 100% (Except no map contact)
1st Patrol (1939) Foltilla: 1 U Boat: Type IIA (U-6) Load: 5 T1 Torpedoes Crew: Full Rations: Full Fuel Reserves/Full Flak Gun installed Patrol Grid: AN18 Logs: Day1: Fresh out of the academy, we departed port from Kiel, began diving exercises and maneuvers in shallow waters. We are currently at peace time, though tensions are arousing with Great Britain. Multiple merchant contacts, engaged with 2 conveys for training exercises. No chance to test how her hull will hold out, bright new day ahead. Day2: Continued on course for grid AN18, taking the rout around england going through the bays in shallow waters. Will stay close to the coast. More diving drills, no engagements. Received orders and warnings not to engage but only for exercises. Weather is clam seas, no precipitation. Looks like it will be smooth near the coast. We are nearing entry to the atlantic ocean, somewhere in the Mid-atlantic, seas are starting to pick up, engaged in few contacts for exercises, no torpedoes fired, we are still at peacetime. Looks like there won't be a war, so all should hold out. We're expected to arrive in Grid AN18 this week. Crew is getting rest and in good spirits. We are hoping for a crash dive and test her hull to see how she holds out tomorrow night. Day3: Day 4: Rough seas, and our men have high moral, successful exercises and engagements. We cruised in the high seas watching the mid-atlantic sunset playing in our gramaphone. It was a good music. After the sun went down, I spotted smoke on the horizon. None of our WO's or bridge crewmen spotted I'm not sure why they didn't see it. I decided to take a look. Ordered ahead full and course to intercept the contact. We've spotted a lone cargo vessel, appeared to be a Norwegian trawler, made direct shiplength contact with the vessel, and began a engagement exercise. Made solution of 9 knots, 30 AOB, and full salvo of our torpedo tubes. Opened the doors, inputed data into TDC then surfaced the boat. All went well, though had trouble getting the range. Hoping if we have a real engagement, our exercises have prepared us well enough. Time for the crash dive, the crew has dreaded. We need see what she can do, I tell them constantly. All are in good spirits and ready to take up the challenge. We began about 10:30pm, gave the Emergency Alarm, crash dove to 80 meters. Begun maneuvers and exercises to simulate depth charge attacks. All went well, everything was in tact, and hardly made any mistakes in the maneuvers. It was time for the depth test. We set dive planes, at flank speed, until 100 meters slowed her down to standard. leveled the dive planes, then began maneuvers in silent mode. Continued dive, 120 meters, we were in the yellow and could hear her screeching as if she was about to be crushed like a tin can. The men didn't panic, and continued the dive to 150 meters, which we leveled the planes. All went well and we were in the verge of crush depth. I ordered to take her up, then at 100 meters, using half of compressed air, I decided to take her down to 165 (Crush Depth) meters. Our little TypeII was holding up well and we had the dive planes leveled but then the dreaded happened. Bulbs started shattering and I could hear the hull screeching and our lighting was flickering in and out. I knew we had to surface and use the rest of our compressed air. The depth meter indicated 172! Having very little experience my heart was pounding and I was sweating. Blow Ballast! We used the rest of our air and safely got back to the surface with minor damage to the aft batteries and hull. It was a dramatic moment but I'm glad I know the limits and capabilities of our Little TypeIIA. All is well with the men, they're getting a good rest, and rations are good. -Vasili |
Gave up on that campaign and started a new one..
In my first patrol with this sub.. It's October 4th 1939 sunk a nice juicy merchant on the way to my patrol off the Dutch coast. Was approacing the dover stright when i spotted a Large Merchant with french colours. I have her two fish but did not stick around to see what happened. Both fish hit but i dont think she is sunk yet. Im as deep as i can safely go in the channel now creaping away at 1kt. have the sonar guy listening and there is a warship invistigateing but is spitting in the wrong direction. It will be dawn in a few hours. Might be best to stay down on silent running till the evening again.. Finally decided to give up useing external view for good. I love the eye candy aspect but as much as I try i cant disapline myself not to use it to cheat. If its not there i cant use it :) Also swapped out the GWX gramaphone tracks and convered some audiobooks and music i like to OGG and put in the folder. Not so emmersive in the realism aspect but realistic in the way it keeps you entertained through the quiet patches.. |
Died on my second patrol. Sunk 5 merchants this patrol for a total of 33k GRT. Total tonnage of this carreer was a small 70k GRT.
I got detected whilst lying in wait for a convoy to go over me. Was at 40m depth and idle. Anyway I couldn't go deeper than 140m because my hull was full off holes thanks to enemy aircrafts. :nope: Therefore I was a bit cautious, a bit too cautious, and only dived to 80m. Well they got me with DCs. I was badly damaged after a run and the second run finished me off. As this was a 1941 carreer I'm eager to start again in the golden days of 1939. |
3 weeks out and I decided to return home..
My radioman and sonar operator needs some specalist training but all in all. Not a bad first patrol.. Patrol 1 U-27, U-Flotilla Saltzwedel Left at: October 2, 1939, 18:22 From: Wilhelmshaven Mission Orders: Patrol grid BF15 Ship sunk! SS Ringleader (Medium Cargo), 5081 tons. Cargo: Steel. Crew: 38. Crew lost: 34 Ship sunk! SS Adrastus (Large Merchant), 10615 tons. Cargo: Explosives. Crew: 87. Crew lost: 8 Ship sunk! MV Said (Small Coal Tender), 314 tons. Cargo: Wine/Spirits. Crew: 10. Crew lost: 7 Ship sunk! SS Watsonville (Tramp Steamer), 1965 tons. Cargo: Coal. Crew: 30. Crew lost: 0 Patrol results Crew losses: 0 Ships sunk: 4 Aircraft destroyed: 0 Patrol tonnage: 17975 tons:arrgh!: |
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