BRIT TV. EIN-MANN-TORPEDO - Sinking of Brit minesweeper

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #1

    BRIT TV. EIN-MANN-TORPEDO - Sinking of Brit minesweeper

    ON BRIT. TV
    Ein-mann-torpedo sinking of Brit minesweeper.

    BACKGROUND
    About a month after the D-Day invasion, around
    6-or-8 July 1944 (depending upon the reference)
    The Germans sent a number of one-man-torpedoes
    (believed to be non-submerging Negers) to sink
    the still-coming invasion fleet. Three Brit minesweepers
    were sunk the HMS Cato, Magic, and Pylades.

    SUNDAY 19 SEPT. ON CHANNEL 4
    at about 4]www.in4mer.com/schedules_c4.asp?xDate=19-09-2004[/url]
    Date Sunday 19 September 2004
    Time]www.divernet.com/profs/0504detectives.shtml[/url]
    It's one thing studying a wreck that's a few hundred years old, but it's a different experience when you have someone aboard who was on the ship, telling you the names of his crewmates and what it was like as the ship went down. We dived on HMS Pylades with a wonderful war veteran called Stan Parker watching our every move on the monitors on the boat.
    Sometimes you can forget that men lost their lives when the vessel you're finning around sank, but Stan was a constant reminder of those men who gave their lives to help Britain win the war.
    This trip was also memorable for a more unsavoury reason - the terrible heaving of the boat and of the stomachs on board.
    We were a long way offshore, the weather was not in our favour, and Stan, the director, cameramen and even one of the divers were very green for a few days. You just can't get the staff!
  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #2
    Here's a synopsis of that

    Here's a synopsis of that program.

    http://www.channel4.com/science...._t.html

    Pylades
    The 60th anniversary of the D-Day Landings passed by in June 2004. One month later, surviving crew of the British minesweeper HMS Pylades mourned 60 years since her demise. Thousands of warships, merchant ships and other vessels were involved in what was the largest ever sea-borne invasion. In their assault on the French coast, the ships were threatened by all manner of weapons including mines and a mysterious German weapon known as the human torpedo. Pylades sank during the operation, but what caused her final demise has never been ascertained. Could she have been the victim of a human torpedo? In the last of this series, the Wreck Detectives teamed up with local divers, naval experts and a former crew member of the ship to find out what dealt the blow that sank Pylades.

    The history
    The northern coast of France was the focus of many fierce battles during the Second World War and its waters granted little mercy to wartime seafarers. The most famous of these battles was the D-Day Landings of 6 June 1944. In an attempt to bring the German occupation of Europe to an end, 3.5 million Allied soldiers were transported from Britain to land on a 40-mile stretch of the Normandy coastline in France.

    Before the operation could go ahead, minesweepers, such as Pylades, were first sent in to clear a pathway for the ships and boats carrying the troops through mines laid by the Germans. At night these vessels would patrol the coast and by day they would hunt for mines laid by the Germans. Their job went on for many weeks after the initial invasions to make way for more soldiers and more supplies.

    However, a month after the D-Day Landings, the Allied forces were still suffering losses at sea around Normandy. The Germans continued to replenish the mines and were at the same time secretly employing their latest weapon – the human torpedo.

    These weapons consisted of an 8-metre long torpedo-shaped carrier-body with a similarly sized torpedo slung below. The operator sat in the carrier-body bow section, inside a Perspex-covered cockpit, which reached only 18 inches above the water and was barely visible from the surface. The pilot's task was to aim the torpedo towards the target by using gradated marks etched on the Perspex cockpit, fire the torpedo and return to base, using a wrist compass to navigate. They had a range of 48 nautical miles and a top speed of 4 knots. Although sometimes referred to as midget submarines, these vessels were unable to dive below the water.

    The human torpedoes were certainly more dangerous to the men who piloted them than to their intended targets – seven out of ten failed to return after their missions. The pilots had to face poor visibility, buoyancy problems and carbon dioxide poisoning. For these reasons, convicted criminals were often brought in to pilot them.

    On 8 July 1944, Pylades was hit twice in her stern – the first immobilised her and the second presented the fatal strike. The captain's log was the only official record of her loss. It said that two mines struck her, but that it was also possible a German human torpedo may have attacked her.

    The dive
    With the help of 78-year-old Stan Parker, who was onboard Pylades when she was struck, the team had a clearer idea of what to expect from the wreck dive. Stan too said that he heard two explosions on that fateful day, and that it was the second one that dealt the deadly blow. Watching pictures beamed back to the dive ship from the wreck site was a poignant moment for him – many of his fellow crew members were killed in the attack.

    French diver Yves Marchaland has been diving this area for years and was able to guide Miranda and the rest of our underwater explorers around the 67-metre long wreck. The wreckage lies at 34 metres and is almost upside down. In good visibility the funnel is visible. But in the dark conditions in which our team were working, the structure of the ship was hard to fathom. Miranda found it difficult to work out where she was on the wreck. With a maximum 3 metres visibility and lots of sharp edges on the wreck, the team had to leave behind its surface-to-diver communication cables for safety reasons.

    A remotely operated vehicle (ROV) was brought in to film the wreck when the team were unable to dive in the strong currents. This camera could stay down on the wreck longer than the divers. Operating a ?70,000 ROV in a running tide, however, is a risky task.

    The stern section of Pylades was devastated and the wreckage strewn over the seabed. To try to figure out what hit her, Ministry of Defence assessment expert, David Manley, explained the difference between damage caused by mines compared to that caused by human torpedoes.

    Influence mines were weighed beneath the surface of the water, they were magnetic and activated when the metal hull of a ship passed over them. When they exploded underneath a ship, they left a characteristic crimping on the metal stern which the human torpedoes didn't.

    As David Manley explained, if the area around the strike zone on the stern of Pylades appeared corrugated, it was sunk by an influence mine, but if not it would mean it was struck by a human torpedo. As the camera panned across the damage, showing a smooth hull beyond the strike zone, it was clear that a German human torpedo had sunk this minesweeper.

    Diving conditions off the coast of Normandy are similar to those off the southern British coast. The water is usually 2?C warmer than the UK and the visibility is a little better. Fish life around this wreck is prolific, but life on the wreck itself is sparse. Ballan and cuckoo wrasse, lobster, pollack, cuttlefish, gorgonians and sunset corals are spotted here, as are smaller inhabitants such as tompot blennies, jewel anemones, snakelocks anemones and spider crabs.

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