Why Depth Charges Don't Have to Touch a Submarine to Sink It

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  • Опубліковано 19 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @SIDEKICKONYOUTUBE
    @SIDEKICKONYOUTUBE 5 років тому +1446

    i got confused from the start. i thought the enemy vessel was a submarine. as they scramble to battle stations, THEY WERE the submarine and the enemy was a ship. zzzz
    and when they fired two torpedo they were already submerged, but after they miss they closed the hatch and starts submerging. arrrggg

    • @swimhack
      @swimhack 5 років тому +110

      Lol, and they showed (twice) the same depth charge exploding literally on top of the sub and it didnt sink

    • @mister-v-3086
      @mister-v-3086 4 роки тому +82

      I continue to be Disappointed in the Smithsonian Channel.

    • @larryjohnny
      @larryjohnny 4 роки тому +3

      What are you a sub captain, good eye mate!

    • @imperia6368
      @imperia6368 4 роки тому +5

      Same felt by me

    • @RP_Williams
      @RP_Williams 4 роки тому +19

      " i thought the enemy vessel was a submarine" - so did the Silverside's crew....that's what the narrator said.
      "and when they fired two torpedo they were already submerged" - ya it looks like the sub was submerged during the torpedo launch animation (continuity error there....though it's possible they were just semi-submerged with just the con tower above surface, it's hard to tell in that short animation), but they actually fired the torpedoes while still on the surface (and then submerged afterwards).

  • @russg1801
    @russg1801 6 років тому +122

    The pressure hull is already under strain. Depth charge effectively increases localized pressure and ruptures the hull.

    • @DW-vl2wi
      @DW-vl2wi 6 років тому +5

      Russ G Thank you. Got guys in the comments doing the most. Occams Razor for the win.
      Edit: Sorry I think this is just a bit off. It's rapid depression and water displacement doing the trick. Like holding a rubber band under tension, and releasing it. The rubber band in this sense is the hull, the bombs are releasing it.

  • @dan-gheorghe2277
    @dan-gheorghe2277 6 років тому +2822

    Uhhh but isn't a submarine already sunk?

    • @DW-vl2wi
      @DW-vl2wi 6 років тому +129

      Tovarasul Ceausescu It's submerged stupid. Jesus Christ everyone needs to relearn English.

    • @Alucard-gt1zf
      @Alucard-gt1zf 6 років тому +422

      Gold Waves but aren’t sunk ships submerged?

    • @DW-vl2wi
      @DW-vl2wi 6 років тому +58

      Alucard My what a revelation. Never thought about that. Yes, sunken ships are submerged, but more importantly, THEY'RE FKIN SUNK.

    • @fdvjlke
      @fdvjlke 6 років тому +280

      im pretty sure it was a joke m8

    • @ottovon1183
      @ottovon1183 6 років тому +118

      Gold Waves /r/Wooosh

  • @bodhi_db
    @bodhi_db 6 років тому +1039

    Wow! The cgi is pretty damn good, especially for a documentary.

    • @russellmoore8187
      @russellmoore8187 6 років тому +10

      Bodhi de Brabander Welcome to the future, it’s rad here!

    • @ashtenlastname4045
      @ashtenlastname4045 6 років тому +17

      No it's not lol

    • @azthetical2980
      @azthetical2980 6 років тому +11

      Yes its great, if you were watching some 1900s movies for your whole life and just realized the internet was a thing

    • @wesjales5578
      @wesjales5578 6 років тому +1

      The CGI gets use over and over and over and over again. I bought the first season, Im not buying the second one.

    • @Minebilding
      @Minebilding 5 років тому

      Bodhi dB better than in most movies...

  • @itsmemaario
    @itsmemaario 6 років тому +893

    If this interests you, I recommend watching a movie called "Das Boot".

    • @larrymcjones
      @larrymcjones 6 років тому +45

      itsmemaario might be my favorite movie of all time I watch the directors cut once every year or two once it’s been long enough that I can’t predict every single tiny detail

    • @itsmemaario
      @itsmemaario 6 років тому +15

      Hahaa! Yeah the long version is the best! I saw it for the first time only few months ago, crazy how I'd have missed such a good movie for so long.

    • @wezerd
      @wezerd 6 років тому +4

      Whats it about?

    • @Madmetroid99
      @Madmetroid99 6 років тому +38

      It is about a german WWII submarine, basically. Movie is intense as fuck, totally recommended.

    • @eddyeel928
      @eddyeel928 5 років тому +8

      One of the best flicks of all time. On the same level as Empire of the Sun.

  • @CHaas-bn3xi
    @CHaas-bn3xi 6 років тому +168

    submarines are just plain scary I'd freaking freak out and die of a heartache

    • @GlitchedBlox
      @GlitchedBlox 4 роки тому +14

      heartache?

    • @Geckobane
      @Geckobane 4 роки тому +3

      That's why they're always volunteer crews.

    • @capt_noo
      @capt_noo 4 роки тому +2

      @@GlitchedBlox yeah just having an ache

    • @simplywonderful449
      @simplywonderful449 3 роки тому +1

      Submarine crews aren't just volunteers, but are carefully psychologically screened before being accepted - even in WWII. You're in a cramped tube in close quarters and stressful conditions, and it's tough work.

    • @repealthepatriotact
      @repealthepatriotact 4 місяці тому

      Why, when you were a boy did a submarine break your little heart?

  • @mrcorncakez2410
    @mrcorncakez2410 5 років тому +4649

    fun fact: there are more airplanes in the ocean then there are submarines in the sky

    • @harrysweeten9417
      @harrysweeten9417 4 роки тому +245

      I asked that Congress woman Alexandra Cortez and she said thats wrong if your south of the equator and stuff.

    • @pirozigzigwam8594
      @pirozigzigwam8594 4 роки тому +59

      Harry Sweeten
      ? R u ok in the head

    • @helloturtle3749
      @helloturtle3749 4 роки тому +23

      True. Japan made special cruiser submarines that were large enough to store seaplanes in side the submarine

    • @DDDDDDDDDD12
      @DDDDDDDDDD12 4 роки тому +3

      MrCornCakez i dont Think so

    • @jaidyngdr966
      @jaidyngdr966 4 роки тому +7

      *MH370 has entered the chat*

  • @criticalthinkingalways3378
    @criticalthinkingalways3378 6 років тому +1354

    This is why you always wrap your submarine in a kevlar condom👍

    • @datboibarlos6766
      @datboibarlos6766 6 років тому +38

      Lofty Marsh You fucking genius. I don't know if you copied that, but I don't care, it's happened now.

    • @joshuadrakard2981
      @joshuadrakard2981 5 років тому +2

      @Robert Barr Kevlar is a brand of aramid fiber

    • @shepherdlavellen3301
      @shepherdlavellen3301 5 років тому

      @@datboibarlos6766 really?

    • @potatoraider7320
      @potatoraider7320 5 років тому +6

      @@joshuadrakard2981 Doesn't matter, be glad you dont have to pay for child support.

    • @battlefieldaddict8160
      @battlefieldaddict8160 5 років тому

      @@potatoraider7320 what is that display pic you have? I see it everywhere.

  • @yatharthpandey7056
    @yatharthpandey7056 6 років тому +378

    Imagining the sub's crew at the time of depth charges creeps me out

    • @Luis-be9mi
      @Luis-be9mi 6 років тому +52

      Yatharth Pandey it was nerve wracking. You can’t see the enemy but you can definitely hear them if your the hydrophone operator. Anxiety gets even worse when you notify the sub’s captain that you hear splashes...

    • @buckeye_8451
      @buckeye_8451 6 років тому +5

      Read "The Depths of Courage" if you want to really get a good idea

    • @WALTERBROADDUS
      @WALTERBROADDUS 6 років тому +4

      Yatharth Pandey It is creepy on a normal day. I visited both a WW2 boat and a Nuc. Everything is cramped and mechanical. Not for me......

    • @stevenweaver3386
      @stevenweaver3386 6 років тому +11

      Das Boot has a great depth charge scene, it really grabs the viewer and puts you right there with the crew.

    • @philgiglio9656
      @philgiglio9656 6 років тому

      Or Run Silent Run Deep, but not the movie.

  • @WSB1469
    @WSB1469 6 років тому +371

    The massive balls of the submariners is what keeps submarines underwater.

    • @ahyesverynice1504
      @ahyesverynice1504 3 роки тому +2

      @Mr Gronk what about METAL BALLS

    • @simunator
      @simunator 5 місяців тому

      and if they want to surface?

  • @breakingtoast2255
    @breakingtoast2255 6 років тому +528

    the giant balls of these sub marine men shielded the sub from destruction

    • @wrongway1100
      @wrongway1100 6 років тому +8

      Breaking Toast The silent service. Best sailers in the Navy.

    • @savagedragon79
      @savagedragon79 6 років тому +3

      Breaking Toast they drain their balls on each other everyday.

    • @Repented008
      @Repented008 6 років тому

      Breaking Toast took the words right out of my mouth.

    • @ssPeto
      @ssPeto 6 років тому +6

      My father survived around 300 depth charges during WWII. He had some amazing stories...

    • @JohnSmith-nl7td
      @JohnSmith-nl7td 6 років тому +2

      wrongway1100 I’m proud to be a submariner.

  • @lairdriver
    @lairdriver 5 років тому +48

    My great grandfather served on a WW2 submarine, they got depth charged by a German destroyer. The depth charges never hit the hull of the submarine. They explosions were powerful enough to break his jaw. His crew mate bit half of his tongue off because he braced himself near a dry valve and the shock waves traveled through his body and slammed his mouth shut. It's so psychologically terrifying that guys on submarines in WW2 have been driven to suicide from it.

    • @ewjiml
      @ewjiml 2 роки тому +9

      German destroyers were few and far between. Highly suspect your story.

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 2 роки тому +4

      @@ewjiml Precisely! I'm calling bs.

    • @kyrozephyr8628
      @kyrozephyr8628 Рік тому +3

      @@ewjimlGermany had 41 destroyers. You’re acting like they were a unicorn.

  • @markherc
    @markherc 5 років тому +7

    I went to the USS Silverside museum in muskegon Michigan, it was huge compared to a German U boat exhibit in Chicago i saw. Another cool thing about the Silverside was how it remained almost untouched since the war and had levers that could still activate the sub.

  • @thom3124
    @thom3124 6 років тому +132

    Silversides did survive. It is docked in Muskegon, MI

    • @bf9142ftw
      @bf9142ftw 6 років тому +3

      Thom An hour from my house!

    • @supergamer761
      @supergamer761 6 років тому +6

      I live by it. its a museum now, you can go inside of it too

    • @ashipnerdoffical4260
      @ashipnerdoffical4260 6 років тому +4

      Went there for my birthday. Well preserved.

    • @kevlargu8483
      @kevlargu8483 6 років тому +4

      I spent the night on this sub. Boy what an experience.

    • @loganwreckedem9550
      @loganwreckedem9550 6 років тому +1

      @@supergamer761 same

  • @oldschoolcfi3833
    @oldschoolcfi3833 6 років тому +19

    Initially the Japanese were setting the depths on their depth charges too shallow, enabling some of the US Subs to escape. This interesting fact was broadcast by a US Politician to the press, whereupon the Japanese corrected their deficiency, and the US Submariners became the Silent Service ever after.

  • @mace8873
    @mace8873 4 роки тому +118

    My grandad was in the merchant fleet when the war broke out, and the day the Germans occupied his country (Denmark) he was on his way to Liverpool, where he volunteered for the Royal Navy upon arrival. He ended up serving on a destroyer, and when he was still alive, he told me how they hunted U-boats back then - when they set out on patrol, he told me, they always had the deck covered in barrels of green paint. When they got a hydrophone contact, they'd slowly circle the area above the German U-boat, in a spiral pattern while they poured paint over the side. Then when the submarine came up to periscope depth to take a look, the paint would cover the periscope lens. The germans, looking through their periscope would think they were still underwater and keep rising. Then when the U-boat had reached a height of about 150m they'd shoot it down with anti aircraft guns.:-)

    • @carsonmorris127
      @carsonmorris127 4 роки тому +7

      Interesting. Thanks for the insight

    • @XiyuYang
      @XiyuYang 4 роки тому +3

      Shoot it down? As in the submarine becoming a plane shoot it down? What?

    • @Rastafaustian
      @Rastafaustian 4 роки тому +20

      @@XiyuYang Obviously, he clearly says the U-boat thought they were still underwater and kept rising to 150m above the surface. They're so much easier to take down this way.

    • @davidj3841
      @davidj3841 4 роки тому +10

      @@XiyuYang No, the submarine tought it was still underwater and kept rising up to 150m out of the water. It's a very common strategy againts submarines.

    • @sureeen2160
      @sureeen2160 4 роки тому +4

      Hahhaha

  • @tomsawyer9403
    @tomsawyer9403 3 роки тому +38

    This video never answered the question of "why depth charges don't have to touch a submarine to sink it". I believe the answer is - that water is non-compressible. SO, water is very efficient at propagating the shockwave from the depthcharge explosion to the surrounding area. btw - the air inside the sub WILL compress.

    • @samheinlen6283
      @samheinlen6283 3 роки тому +6

      it definitely says that it sends shockwaves and the water acts as a hammer so I believe it answered the question at least to a certain extent

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 6 років тому +30

    Hydrostatic pressure from a "near miss" will do more damage than a direct hit. This advice from a Naval officer to U.S. Army General William "Billy" Mitchell led to the successful sinking of the German battleship "Ostfriesland" by aircraft in July, 1921.

    • @hadhamalnam
      @hadhamalnam 6 років тому +5

      Otokichi786 uh, why would the US be sinking german boats in 1921?

    • @thomasthedankengine1409
      @thomasthedankengine1409 6 років тому

      Alex Thoppil yea ikr

    • @algrayson8965
      @algrayson8965 6 років тому +2

      Alex Thoppil - The Ostfriesland was an obsolete pile of junk from 1908. It was a coal-fueled ship, with oil sprayed on the coal beginning in 1915. It was used by the US Navy to test new bombing techniques.
      The new generation of warships were oil fueled. No coal fueled navy could stand a chance against oil burners.
      Germany was very restricted in the kinds and size of warships allowed following their thorough trouncing in WWI.
      Apparently they hadn't had enough as they soon began building a new modern navy at first within the restrictions. As time went by they came to realize that none of the Allied powers were willing to enforce the restrictions.

    • @tooresttrikie6744
      @tooresttrikie6744 6 років тому

      good film about him starring Gary Cooper you could watch guys! Alex Thoppil would answer your question!

    • @philgiglio9656
      @philgiglio9656 6 років тому

      "The Courts Martial of Billy Mitchell": every prediction he made came true.

  • @1houroflove186
    @1houroflove186 6 років тому +1033

    The Title vs What's Depicted - huh?

    • @douglasnakamura6753
      @douglasnakamura6753 6 років тому +39

      Click bait

    • @blameusa7082
      @blameusa7082 6 років тому +18

      Yeh, what the hell did that video clip have to do with the description??

    • @getz
      @getz 6 років тому +93

      It shows a video of how a submarine is attacked by a destroyer with depth charges and explains how that works?
      Turn on the audio?

    • @ChristopherWeaver1
      @ChristopherWeaver1 6 років тому +61

      Damn around the 2 minute mark they say it clearly, Attention spans at 0%

    • @blameusa7082
      @blameusa7082 6 років тому +5

      Agu Obiakor I did and most of those charges exploded within 10meters of the U boat (not submarine as you wrongly propose) (lol) and not a single thing happens to it. So how does the title relate to the video?

  • @awish9979
    @awish9979 6 років тому +137

    How do you sink a submarine if its ALREADY sunken hah?

    • @sransmec
      @sransmec 6 років тому +17

      top 10 questions science can't answer

    • @jacobseager4897
      @jacobseager4897 6 років тому +7

      Woosh

    • @misspineapple553
      @misspineapple553 6 років тому +9

      Classic r/wooosh

    • @goosegg4653
      @goosegg4653 5 років тому +7

      It just has to get down to that second layer of water like at the beach in spongebob. Then it is super duper sunk.

    • @breizhrudie4757
      @breizhrudie4757 5 років тому +3

      @Type 2 unset diabeetus Not a wooosh, he just clarified the situation for the few not understanding already. The joke is too obvious, normies.

  • @jerrydiver1
    @jerrydiver1 3 роки тому +6

    Ideal depth charge placement was one to either side of the pressure hull, where the colliding shock waves had greatly increased combined power exerted against the hull. The 'hedgehog' type of system benefitted greatly from that effect, with each charge's smaller amount of explosive than the larger, conventional depth charges.

    • @craigsawicky1643
      @craigsawicky1643 Рік тому +1

      "Hedgehogs" were required to actually come in contact with the target to detonate, which allowed a much smaller charge of explosives. Depth Charges depend on being very close, and the incompressibility of liquids to virtually crush an Air-Filled container. The real benefit was that the disturbances created by Depth Charges and Cavitation from the Attacking ship's screws, which interfered with SONAR detection, became less of an issue.

  • @yourebigmad
    @yourebigmad 6 років тому +21

    I got real confused at the beginning who was the sub and who was the warship.

  • @russg1801
    @russg1801 6 років тому +52

    In the movies the sub always comes to periscope depth and fires two torpedoes "right down the throat" of the oncoming Jap destroyer. In reality it's a bad move. Little chance of hitting a fast-moving, maneuverable, and relatively small target and if you miss he's going to unload the whole rack right on top of you.

    • @austindorf83
      @austindorf83 6 років тому +11

      Txtspeak What the hell are you talking about? That’s precisely what a torpedo does. It’s fired and detonated underwater.

    • @estebanquito356
      @estebanquito356 6 років тому +2

      Plus if you hit it, it won't sink immediately. It will unload it's whole rack at you anyways

    • @philgiglio9656
      @philgiglio9656 6 років тому

      exactly my first thought. USS Harder made a habit of it.

    • @hailjigglypuff4771
      @hailjigglypuff4771 5 років тому +2

      @@austindorf83
      If they fire underwater the torpedoes would just float upwards. World War 2 submarines were designed specifically to hit targets on the surface. To keep the shot straight you would also need to surface to fire well.
      Firing a shot that is completely submerged you would need to tilt the submarine at the perfect angle to hit the target which is horribly, horribly difficult with their technology and mathematics. They would need to make their plot tables and graphs manually because their practices mostly deal with 2 dimensional firing (the surface) not 3 dimensions. It's a battle of weaponized math!
      Think of doing basic trigonometry and then throw in underwater physics, fast moving ships, and some very unusual arc patterns, not to mention you can't see the enemy at all so you have to guess where they go! That is how difficult a 3-dimensional World War 2 underwater battle seems to be to me.

    • @austindorf83
      @austindorf83 5 років тому +1

      Hail Jigglypuff You have no idea what you are talking about. The Japanese and Germans both used three-axis controlled torpedoes that used propulsion systems that wouldn’t create bubbles on the surface. They were completely submerged from fire to detonation. Not to mention trigonometry has been around for over 2000 years. Do a little research before you vomit some nonsense on the internet.

  • @stevenlange6406
    @stevenlange6406 4 роки тому +2

    5 years on a fast attack in the 80s were the proudest of my life. Best crew of guys I have ever served with. WWII steel boaters are the real deal heroes.

  • @imoneixusa9742
    @imoneixusa9742 6 років тому +87

    You sunk my battleship!

    • @JoseAlvarado-fj8uo
      @JoseAlvarado-fj8uo 6 років тому +2

      Canimaslan USA
      so turn me on
      I'm Mr coffee with an automatic drip

    • @JoseAlvarado-fj8uo
      @JoseAlvarado-fj8uo 6 років тому +1

      Sonny I replied with the lyrics of "bloodhound gang" the discovery Channel song(forgot the name)
      It says you sunk my battleship and proceeds to the 2 lines I wrote

    • @estebanquito356
      @estebanquito356 6 років тому

      A banana!

    • @datboibarlos6766
      @datboibarlos6766 6 років тому +1

      HAH GO FISH!
      Oh wait, wrong game.

    • @annaustin1253
      @annaustin1253 6 років тому

      Great video

  • @Ashfielder
    @Ashfielder 6 років тому +45

    Paladin Danse narrating?

  • @johnslaughter5475
    @johnslaughter5475 4 роки тому +11

    I once heard a submariner from WWII, who survived depth charge attacks, say that there are no atheists on a submarine under depth charge attack.

    • @rickysmyth
      @rickysmyth Рік тому +1

      What happens to your soul if you die in a submarine? Does it swim up?

    • @JohnSmithEx
      @JohnSmithEx Рік тому +1

      @@rickysmyth your soul implodes, and you reincarnate as a puffer fish.

    • @justaponyyy
      @justaponyyy Рік тому

      seems like it didnt help xD

  • @MrNightpwner
    @MrNightpwner 6 років тому +3

    Good acting and editing, well directed

  • @pahaihminen1
    @pahaihminen1 4 роки тому +9

    Title: Why depth charges don't have to touch the submarine to sink it
    Documentary: *submarine doesn't sink*

    • @Mousey6593
      @Mousey6593 3 роки тому

      i just got done watching that

  • @obrez6975
    @obrez6975 6 років тому +9

    OKAY UA-cam. I WATCHED THE VIDEO. STOP RECOMMENDING IT FINALLY.

    • @simplywonderful449
      @simplywonderful449 3 роки тому

      Who is making you click on the video again and again? Someone needs to take your mouse privileges away!

  • @Stefan-up9ci
    @Stefan-up9ci 6 років тому +35

    Very interesting

  • @robynsnest8668
    @robynsnest8668 5 років тому

    SS-236 now resides in our hometown on Lake Michigan, Muskegon. What a wonderful piece of history.

  • @Jason-fz1zd
    @Jason-fz1zd 6 років тому +82

    I always thought a torpedo had to actually hit something to explode very interesting

    • @NiumeLTU
      @NiumeLTU 6 років тому +23

      It depends on torpedeo some torpedoes use impact or magnetic

    • @Jason-fz1zd
      @Jason-fz1zd 6 років тому +4

      Fack A Wolf
      Oh okay still interesting

    • @jamesricker3997
      @jamesricker3997 6 років тому +47

      In 1942 American torpedos had faulty detonators. That mistake kept Japan in the war an extra year.

    • @Jason-fz1zd
      @Jason-fz1zd 6 років тому +2

      James Ricker
      I didn't know that, thanks I love learning about history

    • @veyolaski4324
      @veyolaski4324 6 років тому +9

      Matthew Family torpedos are dangerous and faulty in ww2. Some were big and heavy and have long range and almost undetectable, and some comes back to the submarine that launched them and eventually destroy it(sorry for my English, I m a Chinese)

  • @notmenotme614
    @notmenotme614 4 роки тому +2

    2:00 today I learnt if you’re on the surface you can’t see something deep underwater. Thanks for that amazing discovery.

  • @Izzy-qf1do
    @Izzy-qf1do 4 роки тому +4

    Legend has it that dude still sleeping.

  • @danieldevito6380
    @danieldevito6380 3 роки тому +1

    I can't even begin to imagine the terror of knowing that any second a depth charge could tear open the side of your submarine and drown everyone inside.

  • @GregoryTheGr8ster
    @GregoryTheGr8ster 6 років тому +85

    How did that crew member stay asleep while the depth charges were exploding all around the sub?

    • @Cryo-15
      @Cryo-15 6 років тому +1

      GregoryTheGr8ster was he asleep or injured?

    • @blitzwaffe
      @blitzwaffe 6 років тому +45

      It's possible he was completely exhausted (No sleep for a while due to constant action). When you don't sleep for extended periods, eventually your body will crash and force you to sleep through pretty much anything (speaking from experience of pulling all nighters in college) or maybe he was that deep of a sleeper :p This is my guess but this could just be the show portraying something inaccurately too.

    • @Luis-be9mi
      @Luis-be9mi 6 років тому +45

      It was standard procedure for the crew to lie in their racks(beds) while the sub was being hunted. The more you move the more oxygen you consume.
      Normally when a sub was being attacked by surface vessels, the only means of survival was to stay under and have all nonessential equipment shut off to conserve battery life. Crew members to lie down to save oxygen and just wait for the enemy to either run out of depth charges or have last contact with you.

    • @GregoryTheGr8ster
      @GregoryTheGr8ster 6 років тому +6

      Luis -- That's a good idea. Why was this not standard procedure on the USS Enterprise in Star Trek?

    • @kilikus822
      @kilikus822 6 років тому +6

      Sailors can sleep anywhere, through anything.

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 2 роки тому

    Just toured the Silversides today What an amazing piece of history!

  • @teru797
    @teru797 5 років тому +3

    What did the green light mean? "I am an enemy boat" Well that's cool they gave each other heads up in war...

    • @kaczynskis5721
      @kaczynskis5721 5 років тому

      'Surrender Dorothy'

    • @katie-st8nx
      @katie-st8nx 4 роки тому

      They prob didn't know how to respond but knew they had to do somthing

  • @cjohnsonj4938
    @cjohnsonj4938 5 років тому

    I’ve been on this sub a few times as it’s docked in Muskegon channel very cool to see a animation like this about one of its battles !!

  • @NiumeLTU
    @NiumeLTU 6 років тому +192

    German u boats were way more stronger against depth charges compared to US subs

    • @JoseGranny
      @JoseGranny 6 років тому +3

      Fack A Wolf Why?

    • @NiumeLTU
      @NiumeLTU 6 років тому +133

      Because u boats hull had smaller surface area. And in general german u boats could dive deeper way deeper while US sub dive about 110m german one could 180 easily. Probably because they were smaller

    • @NiumeLTU
      @NiumeLTU 6 років тому +53

      Found a citating form source. Its comparing Type VIIC against Gato class
      Under the water, the German boats take the lead. The smaller VIIC had greater maneuverability, quietness, and greater diving depth. But, though greater depth seems a good advantage, it was actually more important to be able to submerge quickly than deeply. Most U-boats were destroyed on the surface or just under it, not at great depth. But still, the VIIC could submerge quicker than a Gato, but not by much: a well trained crew could get a Gato under in 35 seconds, vs maybe 20 or so for a U-boat. 'Under' was 60 ft for a Gato, and 45ft for a VIIC, due to the different sizes of the boats.

    • @NiumeLTU
      @NiumeLTU 6 років тому +25

      As for mechanical systems, again a clear German lead. German sonar, optics (periscopes), machinery, from hull construction to engine design, was ahead of the Americans. The Germans even had schnorkels, though in reality the schnorkel was not very useful. A sub using a schnorkel could only make 4 or 5 knots and was blind (periscope and sonar unuseable).

    • @NiumeLTU
      @NiumeLTU 6 років тому +51

      There is only one last category, but in some ways, the most important: electronics. Here the US boats enjoyed a huge, decisive, and commanding difference. US boats were equipped with a variety of radars, radar detectors, jammers, and communication devices that U-boaters could only dream of. At a time when U-boat commanders were struggling with makeshift detectors (that didn't work) made from wood, string, and wire, US boats sported a veritable forest of antennas off of their periscope shears. While U-boats were always at the electronic disadvantage to allied ASW, the opposite was true of US Gato boats fighting the Japanese. When many allied ASW ships had radar, Doenitz still claimed radar was impossible to mount on ships (let alone aircraft). When Allied ships were using direction finding to home in on U-boat radios, Doenitz claimed this was impossible. But most of all, the US boats had highly effective radar (the SJ) and very effective radar detectors. This offset all the disadvantages above, including slow diving times (radar gives better warning times), bad optics (use radar in attacks), etc. Towards the end, US boats even got the ST periscope mounted radar - one radar 'ping' and you have the exact range to the target - far offsetting any disadvantage in night attack scope design, and taking the guesswork out of attack solutions. And, of course, the US boat's radio codes were not compromised, while the U-boat 'Ultra' was read with increasing ease as the war dragged on. Many, (most?) U-boats were defeated electronically, by enigma intercepts, direction finding on radio emissions, or radar detection. The allies' complete mastery of the electromagnetic spectrum over the U-boat is the major reason for their defeat, a huge factor in the US subs victory over Japan, and the major difference between the US boats and the U-boats in combat effectiveness.

  • @philgiglio9656
    @philgiglio9656 6 років тому +1

    According to Cmdr. Beech Japanese depth charges when deployed the crew would hear a "click" then the "wham" of the explosion itself. The spacing between these 2 sounds could tewll you how close the charge was. The closer they were, the closer the depth charge was.

  • @johnschmidt2123
    @johnschmidt2123 5 років тому +3

    imagine if we had just 2 nuclear subs one for each pacific and Atlantic with everything but nuclear warheads back in those days.

  • @ashipnerdoffical4260
    @ashipnerdoffical4260 6 років тому +1

    I visited this sub on my birthday. Well preserved indeed.

  • @toxichammertoe8696
    @toxichammertoe8696 6 років тому +22

    I tell you one thing, when you hear those damn Charges going off around you, NOBODY IS AN ATHEIST!, everyone's praying to every single god they could think of!

    • @shadowxxe
      @shadowxxe 4 роки тому +3

      fun fact if they were deep enough (they probably weren't at that point) once the hull was pierced the air in the sub would be instantly compressed to the point of ignition (due to the water pressure) and you would be dead before you even knew what happened

    • @capt_noo
      @capt_noo 4 роки тому +2

      lol my teacher also talked about that, instead he says how whenever a plane is experiencing bad turbulence, even atheist might be praying to god to stop the turbulence

    • @seanpond156
      @seanpond156 4 роки тому +12

      That’s dumb. Imaginary friends are for children. Grow up.

    • @ThePointlessBox_
      @ThePointlessBox_ 4 роки тому +1

      Sean Pond dont forget to tip your fedora as you leave a comment like that

  • @firebrand07
    @firebrand07 4 роки тому

    The Silversides is docked in Muskegon, Michigan. They used to have tours and weekend overnights where the “crew” brings a pizza dinner and shows WWII sub movies.

  • @JoseSanchez-wb5rz
    @JoseSanchez-wb5rz 5 років тому +6

    Them torpedos seemed as reliable as an 1984 YUGO !

    • @233Deadman
      @233Deadman 3 роки тому

      Well if they were the Mark 14s that the US had for part of the war, then they might just be. That model of torpedo could be said to technicallly have a failure rate of over 100%, because usually multiple things went wrong. There was one US submarine fired nearly a dozen at a Japanese vessel, including some fired directly amidships after the first ones had managed to disable it, but it still wasn't sunk, largely due to failures to detonate.
      The reason it wasn't a full dozen fired is that apparently the sub captain chose to take his last remaining torpedo on board back to the US, presumably with the intentions of beating the Bureau of Ordinance around the head with it since they insisted the mark 14s worked perfectly.

  • @austinjames9633
    @austinjames9633 4 роки тому +1

    Fun fact: USS jacksonville was purposely depth charged by the US Navy for studying I've met someone who was on board. I've seen videos of steel beams strong enough to support an f350 bend and warp. Pretty insane the amount of energy from a depth charge.

  • @herbderbler1585
    @herbderbler1585 4 роки тому +6

    Show of hands, who first thought they were called "death charges" when they were five? o/

  • @adambatch5309
    @adambatch5309 3 роки тому

    I’m from Muskegon where Silversides is docked. Really cool!

  • @GregoryTheGr8ster
    @GregoryTheGr8ster 6 років тому +13

    By the way, did the USS Silversides actually have silver-colored sides? Note that the color could be due to bare metal, and not painted silver.

    • @angc214
      @angc214 6 років тому +16

      GregoryTheGr8ster US submarines in World War 2 were named after species of fish. There are several varieties of silversides fish.

    • @GregoryTheGr8ster
      @GregoryTheGr8ster 6 років тому

      angc214 -- Ah, that makes sense. Many fish are quite silvery, so I could see how a fish would be named "silversides".

    • @alphaadhito
      @alphaadhito 6 років тому +1

      They even named a project for upgrading submarines GUPPY

    • @algrayson8965
      @algrayson8965 6 років тому

      A submarine is made of steel and is painted with marine paint. If not painted it would rust rapidly in salt water. They, like all oceangoing ships and boats, are drydocked when they need to be painted below the water line. Aluminum alloy ships are painted as well. Salt water eats aluminum very rapidly. Ships also have electrolytic protection from corrosion.

    • @MottyGlix
      @MottyGlix 6 років тому +1

      Alpha Adhito That name, "GUPPY," really came from "greater underwater propulsive power." But, yes, then they tacked on the "Y" for the piscine effect.

  • @Bibibosh
    @Bibibosh 4 роки тому

    Amazing video

  • @Anlushac11
    @Anlushac11 6 років тому +4

    Its also true that the deeper the sub dives the closer the depth charge has to be to do damage.

    • @RawkL0bster
      @RawkL0bster 6 років тому

      Damage increases as well!

  • @elementalmaverick8588
    @elementalmaverick8588 3 роки тому

    the USS silversides have been turned into a museum in muskegon Michigan. during my time in boy scouts we spent the night on that submarine

  • @MrTigerlore
    @MrTigerlore 6 років тому +3

    “Lernch dur terperderps!”
    “Ermagerd! Derp cherbers!”

  • @austinworkman260
    @austinworkman260 4 роки тому

    My grandfather served on the sliver side, pretty cool seeing this video

  • @fumikonakazawayugumu6119
    @fumikonakazawayugumu6119 5 років тому +6

    The answer is they explode.Depth charges explode underwater. I already know that

  • @davidkent7092
    @davidkent7092 4 роки тому

    The USS Silversides was turned into a museum and you can book overnight stays on it. I slept on it with my Boy Scout troop several years back. It’s parked in Muskegon, MI.

  • @superbobwiley1
    @superbobwiley1 6 років тому +5

    The most famous museum in America lying on UA-cam with clickbait.

  • @averyfreeman6283
    @averyfreeman6283 3 роки тому

    I would like 2 c more videos on Depth Charges ! 👍

  • @martinprince7728
    @martinprince7728 6 років тому +7

    Why didn't they use magnets?

    • @buzzkillbob6969
      @buzzkillbob6969 6 років тому +14

      Because the depth charge could go back and blow your own ship up

    • @martinprince7728
      @martinprince7728 6 років тому +6

      BuzzKillBob fuuuuck true this is why I'd be a terrible engineer 😂

    • @strikewyvernx02s
      @strikewyvernx02s 6 років тому +2

      Use magneto

    • @speed65752
      @speed65752 6 років тому

      Viktor Kaboom!!

  • @Farming_weeds
    @Farming_weeds 5 років тому +1

    I got to spend a night on silversides when I was in boyscouts it was at a naval museum on lake Michigan sleeping next to a disabled torpedo one of my favorite experiences would totally do it again if given the chance when we stayed onboard it was in the final stages of restoration

  • @timwainz
    @timwainz 6 років тому +11

    i have been on that submarine

  • @Mousey6593
    @Mousey6593 3 роки тому

    Cant get a break with this guy straight talk

  • @burtpanzer
    @burtpanzer 6 років тому +5

    It's not the shockwave or energy transfer, it's because water doesn't compress.

    • @ignacioaguirrenoguez6218
      @ignacioaguirrenoguez6218 6 років тому +1

      The fact water does not compress is what leads to shockwave

    • @Repented008
      @Repented008 6 років тому

      burt panzer That's exactly why it's energy transfer. It doesn't compress it doesn't absorb energy...meaning it transfers all the kinetic energy of the blast into the hull of the sub. It's the same reasoning why modern vehicles' crumple zones save lives in an accident.

    • @DJGamingfps
      @DJGamingfps 6 років тому

      It has nothing to do with compression, the explosion creates a vacuum which is so powerful that when it collapses it rips the ship apart. See USS Cole as example.

    • @Repented008
      @Repented008 6 років тому

      I don't think an explosion can create a vacuum....then again, I finished college.

    • @dhkatz_
      @dhkatz_ 6 років тому

      The explosion does not create a vacuum. It is a shock wave, a compression wave if you must. A shock wave is just a compression wave moving faster than the speed of sound in its medium. The fact that water does not compression essentially means the shock wave blasts the water at the submarine like a brick wall (which is why they say "like a hammer").

  • @acicada1526
    @acicada1526 4 роки тому +1

    2:47 my brother at lunch and my dad trying to wake him up 🤣🤣

  • @kowalityjesus
    @kowalityjesus 6 років тому

    USS Silversides exists today as a museum in the waters of Lake Michigan in Muskegon, MI.

  • @HappGamr
    @HappGamr 3 роки тому +1

    Submarine: literally shaking
    Sleeping people: understandable have a great day

  • @AwesomeBeatles
    @AwesomeBeatles 4 роки тому +1

    For anyone who cares to go on a WW2 submarine , the German sub U-505 is in The Museum of Science and Industry , in Chicago. This sub is in excellent shape and very interesting. Also view "Europa the last battle" , on Bitchute.

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 3 роки тому

    Silversides departed Brisbane on 17 December 1942 and set course for New Ireland for her fourth war patrol. While far out at sea on the night of 22 December, the submarine's pharmacist's mate, PM1 Thomas Moore, performed a successful emergency appendectomy on FM2 George Platter, using ether as anesthesia and using rudimentary tools primarily fashioned from kitchen utensils.

  • @kaczynskis5721
    @kaczynskis5721 5 років тому +1

    American torpedoes were often faulty in the earlier part of WW2. They would explode too early or run too deep, going underneath the attacked ship.

  • @larrytruelove7112
    @larrytruelove7112 3 роки тому +1

    A shockwave in water is more devastating than in air. Water hammer is sometimes created when water flow is suddenly interrupted and reflected back.

  • @loganotto2769
    @loganotto2769 3 роки тому +1

    As a Boy Scout I got to spend a night on uss silversides. One of the other kids threw up but it was a great trip

  • @eddiewilliams5188
    @eddiewilliams5188 4 роки тому +1

    when i hear about naval battles,
    I imagine them being, more stressful then tense.
    As quick as they can be, they also seem to be somewhat slow.
    With the waiting to see what happens just to make your next move.
    I'd rather fight on land

  • @srhautosports9613
    @srhautosports9613 6 років тому

    cool , this sub is in muskegon michigan. you can tour it in the summer.

  • @MK-it7wk
    @MK-it7wk 4 роки тому +1

    Life in a submarine must’ve been awful. Cramped, claustrophobic, hot, likely to get trapped and drown when hit. I pity those brave men.

  • @andersonbloemers9214
    @andersonbloemers9214 6 років тому

    I’ve been in this submarine and know it’s not going to sink but I still get tense watching

  • @Klimmerish
    @Klimmerish 3 роки тому

    The silversides is sitting in a channel in my hometown, it’s a beautiful sub

  • @oldgoat1890
    @oldgoat1890 3 роки тому

    I have often thought that it strange that "surface charges" were not developed. Charges that were released by the cornered submarine and floated to the surface.

  • @h.sapienstechnologicus8865
    @h.sapienstechnologicus8865 3 роки тому

    I just love how any sighting of en. ship instantly escalates into a death battle

  • @williamlin2076
    @williamlin2076 3 роки тому +1

    First comment in 2021 happy new year and good health to all ;)

  • @2KXMKR
    @2KXMKR 4 роки тому

    In a Flower Class Corvette documentary a surviving German Uboat crew member said that if a Corvette found them all they could do was dive down as far as they could, shut off the engines and wait while the depth charges exploded above them. He says that the Corvette's 'ping' would make the Uboat ring like a bell on the inside... That's fear. Being trapped in a metal tube below the ocean surface as a ship rains down explosives on you.

  • @BradiKal61
    @BradiKal61 4 роки тому

    The Silversides is in Muskegon Michigan, part of a maritime museum. You can stay overnight on it

  • @briangreen6602
    @briangreen6602 6 років тому +1

    So how close does a depth charge need to be to stand a chance of sinking or seriously damaging a sub ?

  • @Furanku13
    @Furanku13 3 роки тому +1

    >Why Depth Charges Don't Have to Touch a Submarine to Sink It
    That's my secret, Cap. I'm alway sunk.

  • @wolftmfg
    @wolftmfg 6 років тому +1

    Holy shit. The anticipation is causing PTSD for sure. War is bad ☠️

    • @sethhardy866
      @sethhardy866 6 років тому

      You know the ironic part for war is that it forces people to come together and innovate for some sort of advantage. Plus medication was improved by the experiments of infamous germany did to people and what everyone had to deal with in the trenches or other areas of the world that had infections and diseases going everywhere.

  • @Dra741
    @Dra741 5 років тому +1

    Never expose your ship to another ship until you identify it

  • @SportDogg2008
    @SportDogg2008 6 років тому

    She is now a museum here in Michigan! and is a National Historic Landmark.

  • @chasehudson7991
    @chasehudson7991 5 років тому +1

    flex tape the entire sub and your unstoppable

  • @thecitizenjoan
    @thecitizenjoan 4 роки тому +1

    Depth Charge would be such a good name for a punk band

  • @urielmartinez6279
    @urielmartinez6279 4 роки тому

    Serving in a submarine would be a claustrophobics worst nightmare

  • @D_U_N_E
    @D_U_N_E 3 роки тому +2

    Moustache man gives me Ron Swanson vibes.

  • @EndbossProductions
    @EndbossProductions 3 роки тому +2

    is nobody thinking of the fish?? what have they ever done to you

  • @m7md4x4
    @m7md4x4 6 років тому

    We need the dull documentaries of these

  • @kawaininja9144
    @kawaininja9144 4 роки тому

    dying in the sinking submarine must be the most depressive thing to think of

  • @markforster6948
    @markforster6948 2 роки тому

    Silent Service II brought me here! legendary game

  • @1337fraggzb00N
    @1337fraggzb00N 4 роки тому

    Ship: throws deaf charge
    Submarine Commander: WHAT?

  • @alfiemarsh1774
    @alfiemarsh1774 4 роки тому

    2:46 to 3:15 when your alarm doesn’t wake you up

  • @haroon420
    @haroon420 4 роки тому

    I always thought depth charges were to locate submarines. So that the blast reflects the sound of the submarine so they can gain the position knowledge.

  • @Rafa1589
    @Rafa1589 6 років тому +1

    these submarine guys' sleep really can't be bothered by depth charges