perseus
Active member
Has anyone heard of submarines during WW1/WW2 using offensive tactics as a means of defence against destroyers? I vaguely remember a report of a submarine firing a torpedo directly at a closing destroyer head on. Since depth charges had limited range, and shells would just ricochet of the top of the water, it would seem that a partly submerged submarine at periscope depth would have the first shot. Failing this it would seem relatively straightforward to design the submarine to release some mines across the destroyers path as it retreats away under battery power. Perhaps I am missing something obvious here but surely this sort of tactic may have rendered escorts redundant at a stroke?
As far as I know the direct attack was the only means available to a destroyer in the first half of the 20th Century.
The basic destroyer attack procedure was to point the ship at the target and head towards it at a moderate speed. Once the ship was generally within 1,000 yards, sufficient sonar data regarding the submarine's heading and speed should have been determined. At that point, the destroyer's helm would maneuver on a "collision course" with the target. Adjustments would be made in the DD's course to account for the approximate depth of the sub, calculating the amount of time it would take for a depth charge to sink to the lethal level. Depth charges dropped from the stern tracks would be in evenly spaced intervals. The port and starboard throwers would send DC's approximately 50 yards out on either side - forming an elongated diamond shaped pattern. The goal was to pass just far enough ahead of the submerged target and launch the DC's in the hopes that the submarine's travel would take them right into the path of the sinking ordnance.
http://www.valoratsea.com/destroyer.htm
As far as I know the direct attack was the only means available to a destroyer in the first half of the 20th Century.
The basic destroyer attack procedure was to point the ship at the target and head towards it at a moderate speed. Once the ship was generally within 1,000 yards, sufficient sonar data regarding the submarine's heading and speed should have been determined. At that point, the destroyer's helm would maneuver on a "collision course" with the target. Adjustments would be made in the DD's course to account for the approximate depth of the sub, calculating the amount of time it would take for a depth charge to sink to the lethal level. Depth charges dropped from the stern tracks would be in evenly spaced intervals. The port and starboard throwers would send DC's approximately 50 yards out on either side - forming an elongated diamond shaped pattern. The goal was to pass just far enough ahead of the submerged target and launch the DC's in the hopes that the submarine's travel would take them right into the path of the sinking ordnance.
http://www.valoratsea.com/destroyer.htm