penny
Vice Admiral
Posts: 1530
Joined: Tue Apr 25, 2023 11:55 am
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I like your analogy. It seems perfect to me. Theemile.
And the part about not being helpless rings true in the movie as well. I dunno why it caught me off guard when the surfaced subs started shooting guns off the deck. They had some powerful weapons too. A big gun blew a hole in the hull of Hank’s destroyer, killing the messmate and several others.
That was one of the thrilling scenes. It showed some U-boat tactics I had never seen. After being forced to surface, the U-boat Captain put his boat on a course that kissed the destroyer. The sub was keeping pace with the destroyer while touching hulls. The destroyer’s big guns could not depress far enough to shoot the U-boat that was riding mere inches from its hull. The U-boat captain’s skills were amazing. Gutsy move.
If an LD got so close to a ship that it couldn’t shoot it, it’d have to be inside the wedge kissing hulls???
Talk about having to know your vector math, destroyer Captains trying to evade torpedos better have passed that course with a perfect score.
Destroyer Torpedo Evasion and Vector Math in WWII: During WWII, destroyers relied on speed, agility, and clever maneuvering to evade incoming torpedoes. While sailors might not have consciously applied complex vector equations in the heat of battle, their maneuvers were effectively based on vector principles. Here's how vector math played a role in torpedo evasion:
• Understanding Relative Motion: Evasion depended on understanding the relative motion between the destroyer and the torpedo. This involves considering the destroyer's velocity vector (speed and direction) and the torpedo's velocity vector.
• Aiming for an Intersection Point: Submarines or aircraft launching torpedoes needed to calculate a "firing solution" - where to aim the torpedo to intercept the target, taking into account the target's movement. This calculation inherently involved vector math to determine the intersection point of the torpedo's predicted path and the target's predicted path.
• Destroyer Maneuvers: A destroyer commander receiving a torpedo alert would quickly assess the torpedo's path and make adjustments to their own course and speed to avoid the predicted intersection point. Common maneuvers included:
• Turning Towards the Torpedo: By turning towards the incoming torpedo, a destroyer could reduce its relative speed to the torpedo, potentially crossing its path before the torpedo reached the predicted impact point.
• Turning Away from the Torpedo: Turning away could increase the time it takes for the torpedo to reach the ship, giving the destroyer more time to react and potentially increasing the turning space available.
• Changing Speed: Increasing or decreasing speed could also alter the relative motion and the time until potential impact.
• Mental Calculations and Experience: Experienced commanders developed a keen intuition for these scenarios. Through training and practice, they learned to make snap decisions based on the torpedo's bearing, speed, and the ship's capabilities. Important Notes:
• Straight-Running Torpedoes: WWII torpedoes generally ran in a straight line after launch, making the vector analysis more straightforward than with later, homing torpedoes.
• Analog Computers: While the initial calculations for launching a torpedo might involve complex math, analog computers like the Torpedo Data Computer (TDC) were used to automate these calculations and provide the necessary gyro angle for the torpedo.
• Target Motion Analysis (TMA): The overall process of tracking a target, predicting its movement, and calculating a firing solution or evasion strategy is known as Target Motion Analysis.
In essence, a destroyer's evasive maneuvers were about altering its velocity vector (speed and direction) relative to the incoming torpedo's velocity vector, effectively creating a new "target motion analysis" that would hopefully result in a miss.
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Following is a transcript of the most thrilling scene in the movie. The final battle.
[garbled radio transmission]
[Gray Wolf] Greyhound. Guten Morgen, Greyhound. Did you think you had slipped away from this Gray Wolf? No, you did not. You will not. The sea favors the Gray Wolf on the hunt, not the hound on the run. You and your comrades will die today.
[Charlie] Conn, Combat. Radar showing contact at 110. [lookout] Periscope to starboard bow. Range is 2,100 yards and closing, sir. [lookout] About one mile!
There, sir! [Lopez] Fire! The wake, sir! There!
Contact 187… Sonar reports torpedoes, starboard beam, bearing 187. Range 1,500, sir. Left full rudder.
[Watson] Left full rudder. Second torpedo to starboard beam! Bearing 120! Range 1,000! Right hard rudder, hard over! Right hard rudder, hard over!
Belay that, belay that! Meet her. Meet her! Belay. Meet her. Meet her.
[helmsman] Aye, sir. Holding course. [Ernie] Right hard rudder, hard over! Starboard slow astern! Port ahead full! [Watson] Starboard slow astern! Port ahead full!
[Ernie] All hands, brace for collision! Meet her! Steer straight for that pip at 119! 119. Aye, aye, sir. All ahead full. All ahead full. Aye, aye, sir. We’ll ram that U-boat if we have to!
[cannons firing] [lookout] Torpedo off starboard bow! Bring us full left to 100. Aye, aye, sir.
Conning tower, dead ahead! [Watson] We must have hit her! Charlie! Lay a course to open the arcs of fire aft! We’ll hit ’em broadside! Left full rudder, slow to two-thirds. After batteries, fire as you bear. All mounts, local control! Target will be fine on our starboard bow! [repeating command] Fire as they bear!
[Lopez] Weapons, Bridge. All mounts, local control. Fire as they bear. [lookout] Second sub spotted! Periscope, starboard bow! [lookout] He’s got us lined up, sir! All mounts, local control! Get those guns around!
[lookout 2] Air cover! Air cover! [airplane propellers whirring] Signal Bridge reports aircraft signals. “Uncle William,” sir.
Reply, “Baker Dog.” Right standard rudder! Mounts 41 and 42, open fire to mark the target for that aircraft! [talker] …mark target for that aircraft.
[crew cheering] Good work. [crew continues cheering] [Watson] Sir, I stand relieved. Mister Carling has the deck. Very well.
Another tactic I’d never seen out of a sub is to line up a shot while bearing straight down the throat of the destroyer. Head on.
“He’s got us lined up, sir!”
Tom Hanks brought a lot more submarine tactics to this movie. Tom Hanks knew his vector math arithmetic very well.
“Torpedo in the water!” “Watch your training son. What bearing?”
The captain needs those bearings, and he needs them yesterday! The final scene saw Tom Hanks going up against two subs and each sub launched a torpedo.
2 agin' 1
It was the best scene in the movie. The destroyer has two torpedos bearing down on it. The two subs launched a classic one-two punch. It was obvious that that was a classic two sub attack pattern. The way the torpedos were bearing down on him he couldn’t maneuver against the one torpedo because that maneuver would expose him fatally to the other.
Question: Could a Ghost slip inside the wedge via several gun ports that are malfunctioning?
. . .
The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.
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