ORP Wilk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

All three submarines of the Wilk class moored together, with destroyers ORP Burza and ORP Wicher behind them. Kopenhagen, 1934.
ORP Wilk, left, with sister ships Ryś and Zbik, together with the Polish destroyers Burza and Wicher in 1934 in Copenhagen.
Career (Poland) Naval Ensign of Poland
Name: ORP Wilk
Namesake: wolf (in Polish)
Builder: Chantiers Augustine Normand
Le Havre, France
Laid down: 1927
Launched: April 12, 1929
Decommissioned: April 2, 1942 to reserve submarine
Decommissioned: 1951
Fate: Scrapped
General characteristics
Class and type: Wilk-class submarine
Displacement: 980 tons (surfaced)
1,250 tons (submerged)
Length: 78.5 m (257 ftin)
Beam: 5.9 m (19 ft 4 in)
Draught: 4.2 m (13 ft 9 in)
Propulsion: Diesel-Vickers diesel: 1,800 hp (1,300 kW)
electric engines: 1,200 hp (890 kW)
Speed: 14.5 knots (26.9 km/h/16.7 mph) surface
9.5 knots (17.6 km/h/10.9 mph) submerged
Range: 3,500 nautical miles (6,500 km/4,000 mi) @ 10 knots (19 km/h/12 mph)
100 nautical miles (190 km/120 mi) @ 5 knots (9.3 km/h/5.8 mph) submerged
Complement: 46–54
Armament: 1 × 100 mm (3.9 in) deck gun
2 × 13.2 mm (0.52 in) deck anti-aircraft heavy machine guns (mounted in place of 40 mm gun from 1935 onwards)
4 × 550 mm (22 in) torpedo tubes, bow
2 × 550 mm (22 in) (twin) rotating torpedo tubes, midship
16 × 550 mm (22 in) torpedoes (6 in tubes and 10 reloads)
40 × mines

ORP Wilk was the lead boat of her class of mine-laying submarines of the Polish Navy. The ship saw service in the Polish Navy from 1931 to 1951. Her name meant "Wolf" in Polish.

[edit] History

Wilk was laid down in 1927 at Chantiers Augustine Normand shipyard at Le Havre in France. Launched on April 12, 1929, she was commissioned into the Polish Navy in 1931.

When World War II began on September 1, 1939, Wilk, commanded by Captain Boguslaw Krawczyk, took part in the Worek Plan for the defense of the Polish coast. On September 3 she deployed her mines as planned. After suffering battle damage, she left the Polish coast on September 10, successfully escaping from the Baltic Sea and arriving in Great Britain on September 20. Only ORP Orzeł managed to accomplish the same feat later; the other three Polish submarines were interned in neutral Sweden.

On December 7, 1939 one of the mines laid by the submarine in September sunk a German fishing vessel MFK Pil 55 at position 54°37′05″N, 19°47′00″E.

On June 20, 1940, the ORP Wilk rammed an unidentified vessel. The boat may have been U-22, which may have sunk as the result of the collision. This has not been proven and the vessel the Wilk collided with is still a mystery.

Due to her poor mechanical shape, ORP Wilk was decommissioned as a reserve submarine on April 2, 1942.

In 1951, ORP Wilk was decommissioned from the Polish Navy, then towed to Poland and scrapped.

A second ORP Wilk, a Foxtrot class submarine, served in the Polish Navy from 1987 to 2003.

[edit] External links