| Built By: | Vickers (Barrow) |
| Build Group: | A2 |
| Fate: | Broken up in 1920. |
1914-15: 2nd Flotilla, Portsmouth
What appears to have escaped the eyes of researchers so far is that the first diesel-engined submarine in the Royal Navy was HMS A.13X. Launched at Barrow in 1905. The boat was fitted with what is described now as "a heavy oil engine." It was in fact a diesel engine designed and built by Vickers.
Ruston-Hornsby, then Hornsby, had designed an oil engine but it was rejected on account of being "too heavy". The Vickers design was used instead. Yet diesel propulsion was not generally used until the advent of the D class boats.
| 18-04-1905 | Launched |
| 22-06-1908 | Completed |
| Length overall | 105 ft 1/2 inch |
| Beam | 12 ft |
| Depth | 10 ft |
| Displacement | 180 tons (surface) |
| 207 tons (submerged) | |
| Diving Depth | 100 ft |
| Speed | Surface 11.5 knots (design) |
| Surface 11 + knots (service) | |
| Submerged 7 knots (design) | |
| Submerged 6 knots (service) | |
| No. of shafts | 1 |
| Propeller | 3 blades, 4 ft 4 inch diameter |
| Armament | 2 x 18 inch bow torpedo tubes (4 torpedoes carried) |
| Endurance | Surface: 600 miles at full power (design) |
| Surface: 325 miles at full power (service) | |
| Submerged: 20 miles at 6 knots (service) | |
| Complement | 2 x Officers, 9 x Ratings |
K 15 |
|
| Class: | 1915 - 1926: K Class |
| Built By: | |
| Build Group: | K1 |
|
Fate: Sank alongside HMS Canterbury whilst in Portsmouth Harbour, 25th June 1921. |
|
Autumn 1941: U96 departs for enemy flight in La Rochelle, France. In the steel belly of the submarine, 50 men crowd close, among them the young Lieutenant Werner, who came on board as a war correspondent. What begins as a quiet routine company soon turns into hell after the first shelling.
Trapped between fire and water, between fear and despair, between life and death, the team of the U96 experiences up close the destructive cruelty of the beast war. He's gonna change them all. If they survive it.
You don't have to say many words about “Das Boot” anymore: Wolfgang Petersen's dramatic film adaptation of Lothar Günther Buchheim's success novel was the first true blockbuster in German cinema history. “Das Boot” made his director an international star and his largely unknown actors into familiar faces. “Das Boot” was celebrated worldwide and was nominated for the Oscar six times.
Four years later, the six-part TV series was released, which takes an even more detailed and unobstructed look at the crew and their experiences on board the U96. In 1997, the director's cut was released in terms of cut, image and sound. Intensive atmosphere and nerve-scattering tension created a milestone in German film and television history!
Disc 1 The Boat - Director's Cut (Blu-ray)
Disc 2 The Boat - Cinema (Blu-ray)
Disc 3-4 The Boat - TV Series (Blu-ray) Disc 5 Bonus Material (Blu-ray)
Disc 6 Soundtrack (Audio CD)
Disc 7-8 Audiobook (MP3 CD) Bonus Material:Original Soundtrack, Audiobook to the novel, read by Dietmar Baer,
20 pages added or updated in the last 2 month
Please help to maintain this site by reporting any Errors, Broken Links, Information or Site Issues on this page using this button
If you find this site useful, please consider supporting my work with a small Donation.
Please Note: Donations made using this option go directly to the site owner and not to the Submariners Association.
Thankyou for your support.
| Length overall | 105 ft 1/2 inch |
| Beam | 12 ft |
| Depth | 10 ft |
| Displacement | 180 tons (surface) |
| 207 tons (submerged) | |
| Diving Depth | 100 ft |
| Speed | Surface 11.5 knots (design) |
| Surface 11 + knots (service) | |
| Submerged 7 knots (design) | |
| Submerged 6 knots (service) | |
| No. of shafts | 1 |
| Propeller | 3 blades, 4 ft 4 inch diameter |
| Armament | 2 x 18 inch bow torpedo tubes (4 torpedoes carried) |
| Endurance | Surface: 600 miles at full power (design) |
| Surface: 325 miles at full power (service) | |
| Submerged: 20 miles at 6 knots (service) | |
| Complement | 2 x Officers, 9 x Ratings |
K 15 |
|
| Class: | 1915 - 1926: K Class |
| Built By: | |
| Build Group: | K1 |
|
Fate: Sank alongside HMS Canterbury whilst in Portsmouth Harbour, 25th June 1921. |
|
Autumn 1941: U96 departs for enemy flight in La Rochelle, France. In the steel belly of the submarine, 50 men crowd close, among them the young Lieutenant Werner, who came on board as a war correspondent. What begins as a quiet routine company soon turns into hell after the first shelling.
Trapped between fire and water, between fear and despair, between life and death, the team of the U96 experiences up close the destructive cruelty of the beast war. He's gonna change them all. If they survive it.
You don't have to say many words about “Das Boot” anymore: Wolfgang Petersen's dramatic film adaptation of Lothar Günther Buchheim's success novel was the first true blockbuster in German cinema history. “Das Boot” made his director an international star and his largely unknown actors into familiar faces. “Das Boot” was celebrated worldwide and was nominated for the Oscar six times.
Four years later, the six-part TV series was released, which takes an even more detailed and unobstructed look at the crew and their experiences on board the U96. In 1997, the director's cut was released in terms of cut, image and sound. Intensive atmosphere and nerve-scattering tension created a milestone in German film and television history!
Disc 1 The Boat - Director's Cut (Blu-ray)
Disc 2 The Boat - Cinema (Blu-ray)
Disc 3-4 The Boat - TV Series (Blu-ray) Disc 5 Bonus Material (Blu-ray)
Disc 6 Soundtrack (Audio CD)
Disc 7-8 Audiobook (MP3 CD) Bonus Material:Original Soundtrack, Audiobook to the novel, read by Dietmar Baer,
20 pages added or updated in the last 2 month
Please help to maintain this site by reporting any Errors, Broken Links, Information or Site Issues on this page using this button
If you find this site useful, please consider supporting my work with a small Donation.
Please Note: Donations made using this option go directly to the site owner and not to the Submariners Association.
Thankyou for your support.

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