<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead"><span class="smcap">Submarines</span></span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap3"><span class="smcap1">It</span> was an American invention that dragged
America into the war—an American invention
in the hands of barbarians and put to unspeakably
barbarous use.</p>
<p>After seeing how the Huns used the submarine
we are not so sure that we can take much
pride in its invention. But if any blame attaches
to us for developing the submarine, we
made amends by the way in which we fought the
German U-boat and put an end to German
frightfulness on the sea. Of course, the credit
for Germany's defeat is not for a moment
claimed by Americans alone, but it must be admitted
that we played an important part in
overcoming the menace of the U-boat.</p>
<p>There is no question that the submarine was
an American invention. To be sure, we can look
into ancient books and find suggestions for navigating
under the surface of the sea, but the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</SPAN></span>
first man who did actually build a successful
submarine was David Bushnell, back in the
Revolutionary War. After him came Robert
Fulton, who carried the invention farther. He
built and operated a submarine for the French
Government, and, in more recent years, the submarine
became a practical vessel of war in the
hands of John P. Holland and Simon Lake,
both Americans. However, we are not interested,
just now, in the history of the submarine,
but rather in the development of this craft
during the recent war.</p>
<p>With Great Britain as an enemy, Germany
knew that she was hopelessly outclassed on the
sea; but while "Britannia ruled the waves," she
did not rule the depths of the sea, and so Germany
decided to claim this realm for her own.
Little attention did she pay to surface vessels.
Except in the Dogger Bank engagement and the
Battle of Jutland, the German first-class vessels
did not venture out upon the open sea, and
even the lighter craft merely made occasional
raids under cover of fog or darkness, only
to cut and run as soon as the British vessels
appeared. The submarine boat, or <i>unterseeboot</i>
as the Germans called it, was virtually the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</SPAN></span>
only boat that dared go out into the high seas;
consequently, the Germans specialized upon
that type of craft and under their close attention
it grew into a highly perfected war-vessel.
But the Germans were not the only ones to develop
the submarine, as we shall see.</p>
<h3>CONSTRUCTION OF THE U-BOATS</h3>
<p>When the great war broke out, the German U-boat
was a comparatively small craft, less than
150 feet long, with its main hull only 12 feet in
diameter. It could make a speed of 12 knots on
the surface and only 9 when submerged. But
as the war progressed, it grew larger and
larger, until it attained a length of over 300
feet and its speed was increased to 12 knots
when submerged and 18 knots on the surface.</p>
<p>Figs. 16 to 18 show the construction of one
of the early U-boats. The later boats were
built after the same general plan, but on a
bigger scale.</p>
<div id="ip_234" class="figcenter" style="width: 506px;"><SPAN href="images/i_235l.jpg">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_235.jpg" width-obs="506" height-obs="132" class="lborder" alt="" /></SPAN><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of the "Scientific American"</div>
<div class="caption0"><span class="smcap">Fig. 16.</span> Sectional view of one of the earlier German U-Boats</div>
</div>
<div id="ip_234b" class="figcenter" style="width: 505px;"><SPAN href="images/i_235bl.jpg">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_235b.jpg" width-obs="505" height-obs="90" class="lborder" alt="" /></SPAN><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of the "Scientific American"</div>
<div class="caption0"><span class="smcap">Fig. 17.</span> Sectional plan view of a German U-Boat of the type used at the beginning of
the war</div>
</div>
<p>It is not always safe to judge a thing by its
name; to do so is apt to lead to sad mistakes.
One would naturally suppose, from its name,
that a submarine is a boat that lives under
water, like a fish. But it is not a fish; it is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</SPAN></span>
an air-breathing animal that prefers to stay
on the surface, only occasionally diving under to
hide from danger or to steal upon its prey.
During the war, the German U-boats did not
average three hours per day under the surface!
Because they were intended to run on the surface
they had to be built in the form of a surface
vessel, so as to throw off the waves and
keep from rolling and pitching too much in a
seaway. But they also had to be built to withstand
the crushing weight of deep water, and as
a cylinder is much stronger than a structure of
ordinary boat shape, the main hull was made circular
in section and of heavy plating, strongly
framed, while around this was an outer hull
of boat shape, as shown in <SPAN href="#ip_238">Fig. 18.</SPAN></p>
<h3>PUTTING HOLES IN A TANK TO KEEP IT FULL</h3>
<p>The space between the inner and outer
hulls was used for water ballast and for reservoirs
of oil to drive the engines; and, strange
as it may seem, the oil-tanks were always kept
full by means of holes in the bottom of them.
As the oil was consumed by the engines, water
would flow into the reservoir to take its place,
and the oil, being lighter than water, would float<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</SPAN></span>
on top. The false hull was of light metal, because
as it was open to the sea, the pressure on
the inside was always the same as that on the
outside. The reservoirs of oil and the water-ballast
tanks protected the inner hull of the
vessel from accidental damage and from hostile
shell and bombs. There were water-ballast
tanks inside the inner hull as well, as shown in
the cross-sectional view, <SPAN href="#ip_238">Fig. 18.</SPAN> The water
in the ballast-tanks was blown out by compressed
air to lighten the U-boat and the boat
was kept on an even keel by the blowing out
or the letting in of water in the forward and
after tanks.</p>
<div id="ip_238" class="figcenter" style="width: 317px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_237.jpg" width-obs="317" height-obs="397" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of the "Scientific American"</div>
<div class="captionh0"><span class="smcap">Fig. 18.</span> Transverse section through conning-tower, showing
the interior (circular) pressure-resisting hull and the
lighter exterior hull, which is open to the sea</div>
</div>
<p>A heavy lead keel was attached to the bottom
of the boat, to keep it from rolling too much.
In case of accident, if there were no other way of
bringing the boat to the surface, this keel could
be cast loose.</p>
<p>At the forward end, where the torpedo-tubes
were located, there was a torpedo-trimming
tank. Torpedoes are heavy missiles and every
time one was discharged the boat was lightened,
and the balance of the submarine was upset.
To make up for the loss of weight, water had
to be let into the torpedo-trimming tank.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</SPAN></span>
A submarine cannot float under-water without
swimming; in other words, it must keep its
propellers going to avoid either sinking to the
bottom of the sea or bobbing up to the surface.
To be sure, it can make itself heavier or lighter
by letting water into or blowing water out of
its ballast-tanks, but it is impossible to regulate
the water ballast so delicately that the submarine
will float submerged; and should the
boat sink to a depth of two hundred feet or so,
the weight of water above it would be sufficient
to crush the hull, so it is a case of sink
or swim. Usually enough ballast is taken on
to make the submarine only a little lighter than
the water it displaces; and then to remain under,
the vessel must keep moving, with its horizontal
rudders tilted to hold it down. The horizontal
rudders or hydroplanes of the U-boat
are shown in <SPAN href="#ip_234b">Fig. 17</SPAN>, both at the bow and at
the stern.</p>
<p>The main hull of the vessel was literally filled
with machinery. In the after part of the boat
were the Diesel oil-engines with which the
U-boat was propelled when on the surface.
There were two engines, each driving a propeller-shaft.
It was impossible to use the engines<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</SPAN></span>
when the vessel was submerged, not because
of the gases they produced—these could
easily have been carried out of the boat—but
because every internal-combustion engine consumes
enormous quantities of air. In a few
minutes the engines would devour all the air
in the hull of the submarine and would then
die of suffocation. And so the engines were
used only when the submarine was running
awash or on the surface, and then the air consumed
by them would rush down the hatchway
like a hurricane to supply their mighty lungs.</p>
<h3>ENGINES THAT BURN HEAVY OIL</h3>
<p>The oil-engines were strictly a German invention.
In the earlier days of the submarine
gasolene-engines were used, but despite every
precaution, gasolene vapors occasionally would
leak out of the reservoirs and accumulate in
pockets or along the floors of the hull, and it
needed but a spark to produce an explosion
that would blow up the submarine. But
Rudolph Diesel, a German, invented an engine
which would burn heavy oils.</p>
<div id="ip_240" class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_240.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="346" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">(C) Underwood & Underwood</div>
<div class="caption0">Complex Mass of Wheels and Dials inside a German Submarine</div>
</div>
<p>In the Diesel engine there are no spark-plugs
and no magneto: the engine fires itself without<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</SPAN></span>
electrical help. Air is let into the cylinder
at ordinary atmospheric pressure, or fifteen
pounds per square inch. But it is compressed
by the upward stroke of the piston to about
five hundred pounds per square inch. When
air is compressed it develops heat and the sudden
high compression to over thirty times its
normal pressure raises the temperature to something
like 1000 degrees Fahrenheit. Just as
this temperature is reached, a jet of oil is blown
into the cylinder by air under still higher pressure.
Immediately the spray of oil bursts into
flame and the hot gases of combustion drive the
piston down. Because of the intense heat almost
any oil, from light gasolene to heavy, almost
tarlike oils, can be used. As heavy oils
do not throw off any explosive vapors unless
they are heated, they make a very safe fuel for
submarines.</p>
<div id="ip_241" class="figcenter" style="width: 469px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_241.jpg" width-obs="469" height-obs="296" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">Photograph by International Film Service</div>
<div class="caption0">Surrendered German Submarines, showing the Net Cutters at the Bow</div>
</div>
<p>To drive the U-boat when no air was to be had
for the engines, electric motors were used.
There was one on each propeller-shaft and the
shafts could be disconnected from the oil-engines
when the motors were driving. The motors
got their power from storage batteries in
the stern of the submarine and under the floors<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</SPAN></span>
forward. The motors when coupled to and
driven by the engines generated current which
was stored in the storage batteries. The submarine
could not run on indefinitely underwater.
When its batteries were exhausted it
would have to come to the surface and run its
engines to store up a fresh charge of electricity.
The electric motors gave the boat a speed of
about nine knots.</p>
<p>In addition to the main engines and motors,
there was a mass of auxiliary machinery.
There were pumps for compressing air to blow
the ballast-tanks and to discharge the torpedoes.
There was a special mechanism for operating
the rudder and hydroplanes, and all sorts of
valves, indicators, speaking-tubes, signal lines,
etc. The tiny hull was simply crammed with
mechanism of all kinds and particularly in the
early boats there was little room for the accommodation
of the officers and crew. The officers'
quarters were located amidships, and forward
there were the folding berths of the crews. In
the later boats more space was given the men.
The large U-boats carried a crew of forty and
as the hazards of submarine warfare increased,
more attention had to be paid to the men.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>FAT MEN NOT WANTED</h3>
<p>Oddly enough, small, slender men were preferred
for submarine duty, not because of lack
of space, but because it was apt to be very cold
in a submarine, particularly in the winter-time.
The water cooled off the boat when the submarine
was traveling submerged, and the motors
gave off little heat; while when the vessel was
running on the surface the rush of wind to supply
the engines kept the thermometer low. This
meant that the men had to pile on much clothing
to keep warm, which made them very bulky.
The hatchway was none too large and a fat man,
were he bundled up with enough clothing to keep
him warm, would have a hard time squeezing
through.</p>
<p>In the center of the vessel was the main hatchway,
leading up to the conning-tower, which
was large enough to hold from three to five men.
This was the navigating-room when the vessel
was running submerged, and above it was the
navigating-bridge, used when the submarine
was on the surface. In the conning-tower there
was a gyroscopic compass; a magnetic compass
would not work at all inside the steel hull of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</SPAN></span>
the U-boat. And here were the periscopes or
eyes of the submarine, rising from fifteen to
twenty feet above the roof of the conning-tower.
There were usually two periscopes.
They could be turned around to give the
man at the wheel a view in any direction and
they were used sometimes even when the vessel
was running on the surface, to give a longer
range of vision.</p>
<h3>THE BLINDNESS OF THE SUBMARINE</h3>
<p>Now, a submarine cannot see anything underwater.
The commander cannot even see the
bow of his boat from the conning-tower, and
until he gets near enough to the surface to
poke his periscope out of water he is absolutely
blind and must feel his way about with compass
and depth-gage. It was always an anxious moment
for the U-boat commander, when he was
coming up, until his periscope broke out of the
water and he could get his bearings; and even
that was attended with danger, for his periscope
might be seen. Of course a periscope
is a very insignificant object on the broad sea,
but when a submarine is moving its periscope
is followed by a wake which is very conspicuous,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</SPAN></span>
and so the U-boat ran a chance of being
discovered and destroyed before it could dive
again to a safe depth. Later, telescoping periscopes
were used, which could be raised by
means of a hand-lever. The submarine would
run along just under the surface and every
now and then it would suddenly raise its periscope
for an observation and drop it down again
under cover if there was danger nigh. This
was much simpler and quicker than having a six-or
eight-hundred-ton boat come up to the surface
and dive to safety. He might even collide
with a vessel floating on the surface, but to
lessen this danger submarines were furnished
with ears or big microphone diaphragms at each
side of the hull by which a ship could be located
by the noise of its propellers.</p>
<p>In the bow were the torpedo-tubes and the
magazine of torpedoes. At first there were only
two torpedo-tubes, but later the number was
increased to four. These were kept constantly
loaded, so that the projectiles could be launched
in rapid succession, if necessary, without a
pause for the insertion of a fresh torpedo. In
some submarines tubes were provided in the
stern also so that the boat could discharge a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</SPAN></span>
torpedo at its enemy while running away from
him.</p>
<p>Each tube was closed at the outer end by a
cap and at the inside end by a breech-block.
The tube was blown clear of water by means of
compressed air, and of course the outer cap was
closed when the breech was open to let in a torpedo.
Then the breech was closed, the cap
opened, and the torpedo was discharged from
the tube by a blast of air.</p>
<h3>THE TORPEDO</h3>
<p>A torpedo is really a motor-boat, a wonderfully
constructed boat, fitted with an engine
of its own that is driven by compressed
air and which drives the torpedo through the
water at about forty miles per hour. The
motor-boat is shaped like a cigar and that
used by the Germans was about fifteen feet
long and fourteen inches in diameter. We
used much larger torpedoes, some of them
being twenty-two feet long. Ours have a large
compressed-air reservoir and will travel for
miles; but the Germans used their torpedoes
at short ranges of a thousand yards and under,
cutting down the air-reservoir as much as possible<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</SPAN></span>
and loading the torpedo with an extra
large explosive charge.</p>
<p>We found in the Diesel engine that when
air is highly compressed it becomes very
hot. When compressed air is expanded, the
reverse takes place, the air becomes very cold.
The air that drives the motor of the torpedo
grows so cold that were no precautions taken
it would freeze any moisture that might be
present and would choke up the engine with the
frost. And so an alcohol flame is used to heat
the air. The air-motor is started automatically
by release of a trigger as the torpedo is blown
out of the torpedo-tube. By means of gearing,
the motor drives two propellers. These run
in opposite directions, so as to balance each
other and prevent any tendency for the torpedo
to swerve from its course. The torpedo is
steered by a rudder which is controlled by a
gyroscope, and it is kept at the proper depth
under water by diving-rudders which are controlled
by a very sensitive valve worked by the
weight of the water above it. The deeper the
water, the greater the weight or pressure; and
the valve is so arranged that, should the torpedo
run too far under, the pressure will cause<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</SPAN></span>
the diving-rudders to tilt until the torpedo comes
up again; then if the torpedo rises too high, the
valve will feel the reduction of pressure and
turn the rudders in the other direction.</p>
<p>The business end of a torpedo is a "war-head"
packed with about four hundred
pounds of TNT. At the nose of the torpedo
is a firing-pin, with which the war-head
is exploded. Ordinarily, the firing-pin does
not project from the torpedo, but there is a
little propeller at the forward end which is
turned by the rush of water as the torpedo
is driven on its course. This draws out the
firing-pin and gets everything ready for the
TNT to explode as soon as the firing-pin is
struck. But the firing-pin is not the only means
of exploding the torpedo. Inside there is a very
delicate mechanism that will set off the charge
at the least provocation. In one type of torpedo
a steel ball is provided which rests in a
shallow depression and the slightest shock, the
sudden stopping or even a sudden swerve of the
torpedo, would dislodge the ball and set off the
charge. Hence various schemes, proposed by
inventors, for deflecting a torpedo without
touching the firing-pin, would have been of no
value at all.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>GUNS ON SUBMARINES</h3>
<p>As torpedoes are expensive things, the
U-boats were supplied with other means of
destroying their victims. The Germans sprang
a surprise by mounting guns on the decks of
their submarines. At first these were arranged
to be lowered into a hatch when the boat was
running submerged, but later they were permanently
mounted on the decks so that they
would be ready for instant use. They were
heavily coated with grease and the bore was
swabbed out immediately when the boat came to
the surface, so that there was no danger of
serious rust and corrosion. The 3-inch gun of
the early months of the war soon gave way to
heavier pieces and the latest U-boats were supplied
with guns of almost 6-inch caliber and
there was a gun on the after deck as well as
forward.</p>
<p>The U-boats depended upon radiotelegraphy
to get their orders and although they did not
have a very wide sending-range, they could receive
messages from the powerful German station
near Berlin. The masts which carried the
radio aërials could be folded down into pockets<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</SPAN></span>
in the deck. From stem to stern over the entire
boat a cable was stretched which was intended to
permit the U-boat to slide under nets protecting
harbor entrances, and in later boats there
were keen-toothed knives at the bow which
would cut through a steel net. During the war
German and Austrian U-boats occupied so much
attention that the public did not realize the
part that the Entente Allies were playing under
the sea. America, Great Britain, France, and
Italy made good use of submarines, operating
them against enemy vessels, blockading enemy
ports, and actually fighting enemy submarines.</p>
<h3>A STEAM-DRIVEN SUBMARINE</h3>
<p>The British in particular did splendid work
with the submarine and developed boats that
were superior to anything turned out by the
Germans. For instance, they developed a submarine
which is virtually a submersible destroyer.
It is 340 feet long and it can make a
speed of 24 knots on the surface. The most
remarkable part of this boat is that its engines
are driven by steam. Its boilers are fired with
oil fuel. There are two smoke-stacks which fold
down when it submerges. Of course when running<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</SPAN></span>
under-water the vessel is driven by electricity
and it makes a speed of 10 knots. It
carries three 4-inch guns, two forward and one
aft, and its displacement submerged is 2700 tons
as against 800 tons for the largest German submarines.</p>
<h3>A SUBMARINE THAT MOUNTS A TWELVE-INCH GUN</h3>
<p>Still more remarkable is the big "super-submarine"
designed by the British to bombard the
forts of the Dardanelles, but unfortunately it
was built too late to be used there. This submarine
carries a gun big enough for a battle-ship.
It is of 12-inch caliber and weighs 50
tons. Of course a big gun like that could not
be fired athwart the submarine. It might bowl
the little vessel over, even though it was a
1700-ton submarine. The gun is mounted to
fire fore and aft, with a deviation of only a few
degrees to one side or the other, so that the
shock of the recoil is taken by the length instead
of the beam of the submarine. It fires a
shell weighing 620 pounds and a full charge is
not used, so that the extreme range is only
about 15,000 yards. This submarine monitor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</SPAN></span>
would have been a very difficult target for the
Turkish gunners to hit.</p>
<p>When the war came to an end and the German
submarines surrendered to the Entente
Allies at Harwich, there was considerable
public curiosity as to whether or not an examination
of the U-boats would disclose any
wonderful secrets. But they contained nothing
that the Allies did not already know, and one
British officer stated that the plans of the German
submarines had often fallen into their
hands long before a U-boat of the same type
was captured!</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />