TYPE VIIC submarine

The full index of our ship stamp archive
Post Reply
Online
aukepalmhof
Posts: 7771
Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:28 am

TYPE VIIC submarine

Post by aukepalmhof » Sat Jan 15, 2022 1:13 am

Type VIIC
Displacement 769 tons surfaced, 871 ton submerged, dim. 67.10 x 6.20 x 4.74m (draught) length bpp 50.50m, height 9.60m.
Speed 17.7 knots surface, 7.06 knots submerged. Range 8,500 miles by a speed of 10 knots on the surface and 80 miles by a speed of 4 knots, submerged.
Armament 1 – 88/45 deck gun with 220 rounds. 4 bow and 1 stern torpedo tube, 14 torpedoes.
Crew 44 – 52 men.
Maximum depth circa 220 meters.
The Type VIIC was the workhorse of the German U-boat force, with 568 commissioned from 1940 to 1945. The first VIIC boat commissioned was the U-69 in 1940. The Type VIIC was an effective fighting machine and was seen almost everywhere U-boats operated, although its range of only 6,500 nautical miles was not as great as that of the larger Type IX (11,000 nautical miles), severely limiting the time it could spend in the far reaches of the western and southern Atlantic without refueling from a tender or U-boat tanker. The VIIC came into service toward the end of the "First Happy Time" near the beginning of the war and was still the most numerous type in service when Allied anti-submarine efforts finally defeated the U-boat campaign in late 1943 and 1944.
Type VIIC differed from the VIIB only in the addition of active sonar and a few minor mechanical improvements, making it 2 feet longer and 8 tons heavier. Speed and range were essentially the same. Many of these boats were fitted with snorkels in 1944 and 1945.
They had the same torpedo tube arrangement as their predecessors, except for U-72, U-78, U-80, U-554, and U-555, which had only two bow tubes, and for U-203, U-331, U-351, U-401, U-431, and U-651, which had no stern tube.
On the surface, the boats (except for U-88, U-90, and U-132 to U-136 which used MAN M6V40/46s) were propelled by two supercharged Germaniawerft, 6 cylinders, 4-stroke M6V 40/46 diesels totaling 2,800 to 3,200 PS (2,800 to 3,200 shp; 2,100 to 2,400 kW) at 470 to 490 rpm.
For submerged propulsion, several different electric motors were used. Early models used the VIIB configuration of two AEG GU 460/8-276 electric motors, totaling 750 PS (740 shp; 550 kW) with a max rpm of 296, while newer boats used two BBC GG UB 720/8, two GL (Garbe, Lahmeyer & Co.) RP 137/c electric motors or two Siemens-Schuckert-Werke (SSW) GU 343/38-8 electric motors with the same power output as the AEG motors.
Perhaps the most famous VIIC boat was the U-96, featured in the movie Das Boot.

Maldives 2015 22Rf sg?, Scott? (The stamp is designed after a Revell model kit RV5093.)
St Tomes et Principe 2021 31 Db sg?, Scott? (The stamp given type VII is depicted but she is VIIC,)
Central African Republic 2022 1200 FCFA sg?, Scott?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Ty ... #Type_VIIC U-boat net.
Attachments
2015 Type-VIIC-U-Boat-RV5093 (2).jpg
2015 Type-VIIC-U-Boat-RV5093 (2).jpg (66.16 KiB) Viewed 530 times
2021 type VII Submarines (3).jpg
2021 type VII Submarines (3).jpg (64.17 KiB) Viewed 530 times
2022 U-Boat-Type-VIIC (3).jpg
2022 U-Boat-Type-VIIC (3).jpg (27.31 KiB) Viewed 123 times

Post Reply