15 June 2008, 07:59
tin canwreckage of WWII U-boat could create disaster
quote:
The sinking of U-864 was a memorable episode of British derring-do. Once the British decrypted U-864's mission, they deployed the Venturer, commanded by 25-year-old Jimmy Launders, to destroy it. The Venturer located U-864 on the morning of Feb. 9, 1945, and waited for the German sub to surface and present an easier target, according to a BBC documentary on the sinking of U-864. The German sub's operators, however, realized they were being tailed, and began zig-zagging to get away.
Knowing he was outgunned — the Venturer had only four torpedoes and U-864 had 22 — Launders decided to launch all his torpedoes, in 17-second intervals, along what he predicted would be his adversary's path. Launders then dived to evade retaliation. Hearing the torpedoes coming, U-864 dived deeper and turned to avoid them; it managed to dodge the first three but steered into the path of the fourth. Seventy-three men were killed. It was the first instance of one submarine sinking another while both were submerged.
http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/loca...4/0614submarine.html15 June 2008, 08:41
MacifejOld news....was on the Boob Tube a ways back. Maybe Discovery or Military or the Hitler Channel.
16 June 2008, 01:27
ireload2It should be easy for the Glomar Explorer to pull it up.
16 June 2008, 23:44
mr rigbyThe German submarine, that was sunk off the coast of Norway in 1945, one on of the last germans subs sunk, it carried a load of mercury, Me 262 plans and a plane , VE weapons technology and scientists to Japan. Hit by the british sub by a underwater fired and aimed submarine it was the first sunk sub in a sub versus sub action .
There hasnt been a lifting operation of it yet but it will be heard more of it , the water there is polluted so it is dangerous to fish there.
17 June 2008, 04:24
Grizzly AdamsNothing really new here and I think they are probably over dramatizing this situation. Stumbled on an article in a National Geographic magazine a few months ago, about 2 Spanish galleons that sank with full cargoes of mercury, in the Bahamas, about 400 years ago. The mercury was still there, but because of the weight, it sank into sand. I would think in the tropics, the chance of sea water reacting with mercury would be a lot more likely, than in the cold north Atlantic.
Grizz