German Type I submarine

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U-25, a Type I U-boat, on patrol.
U-25, a Type I U-boat, on patrol.

The Type I Evan-boat was the first post-World War I attempt by the German Kriegsmarine to produce an ocean going U-boat. Only two Type IAs were built, but the decision to halt production on further boats is believed to be because of political decisions and not because of major faults in the Type I design. Although the boats did not have any major design faults, they were known to be difficult to handle due to their poor stability and slow dive rate. The type was based on a design by the Ingenieurskantoor voor Scheepsbouw, that also produced the Soviet Type S Submarines. The design later served as a basis for the development of other types of boats, primarily the VII and IX classes.

Constructed by AG Weser in Bremen, the Type IA was launched on February 14, 1936. The two boats produced, U-25 and U-26, were primarily used as training vessels and for propaganda purposes to fly the Nazi flag. In 1940, the boats were called into combat duty due to the shortage of available submarines. Both boats experienced short, but successful combat careers. U-25 participated in five war cruises, sinking eight enemy ships. On August 3, 1940, while on a mine laying mission near Norway, U-25 struck a mine and sank with all hands on board.

U-26 carried out eight war cruises, sinking three merchant ships and damaging one British warship on its first mission laying mines. On its second war cruise it became the first U-boat during World War II to enter the Mediterranean Sea. U-26 participated in three other successful war patrols, sinking four additional merchant ships. On its eighth war cruise the boat sunk three merchant ships and damaged another ship the next day. The attack on this ship led to severe depth-charging by two British warships. Unable to dive, U-26 was forced to surface where she was bombed by a Sunderland flying boat. The crew scuttled the submarine and were rescued by Allied warships.

[edit] General characteristics

  • Displacement: 862 tons (sf), 982 tons (sm)
  • Length: 72.5 meters
  • Beam: 6.2 meters
  • Draft: 4.3 meters (sf)
  • Power: 3080 horsepower (sf), 1000 horsepower (sm)
  • Speed: 18.6 knots (sf), 8.3 knots (sm)
  • Range: 7900 nm @ 10 knots (14615 km @18.5kph) (sf), 78 nm @ 4 knots (144 km @ 7.4kph)(sm)
  • Torpedo tubes: 4 bow, 2 stern
  • Torpedoes: 14
  • Mines: 28 TMA
  • Crew: 44 – 46 men
  • Guns: 1x105mm (4.1 inch), 1x20mm (0.79 inch) AA
  • Maximum depth: 200 meters

sf = surfaced, sm = submerged

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • U-Boat Aces.com. U-Boat Types – Type IA U-Boat. Retrieved on July 31, 2006.
  • U-boat.net. U-Boat Types – Type IA. Retrieved on July 31, 2006.
  • Gordon Williamson. Wolf Pack: The Story of the U-Boat in World War II, Osprey Publishing Limited, 2005.


U-boats U-47
U-boatBattle of the Atlantic (1914–1918)Battle of the Atlantic (1939–1945)Operation Deadlight
U-boats: List of U-boatsList of successful U-boatsList of U-boats never deployedList of Austrian U-boatsForeign captured U-boats
Flotillas: List of U-boat flotillas1. Unterseebootsflottille2. Unterseebootsflottille3. Unterseebootsflottille4. Unterseebootsflottille5. Unterseebootsflottille6. Unterseebootsflottille7. Unterseebootsflottille8. Unterseebootsflottille9. Unterseebootsflottille11. Unterseebootsflottille13. Unterseebootsflottille29. Unterseebootsflottille
Commanders: List of successful U-boat commandersAces of the DeepErich RaederKarl Dönitz
Wolf packs: BlücherEisbärEndrassHaiHechtLachsPfadfinderSteinbrockTümmlerVorwärtsWolf
Combats: Convoy SC-7Convoy PQ-17Mediterranean U-boat CampaignBattle of the St. LawrenceBlack MayBismarck Chase
Capital ships sunk: HMS Royal OakHMS BarhamHMS CourageousHMS Ark RoyalHMS AudacityHMS AvengerHMS EagleUSS Block Island
Technology: AsdicLeigh LightQ-shipSchnorkel edit


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