German submarine U-A
| Career (Nazi Germany) | |
|---|---|
| Name: | UA (ex Batiray) |
| Ordered: | 1937 |
| Builder: | Germaniawerft, Kiel |
| Laid down: | 1937 |
| Launched: | 28 August 1938 |
| Commissioned: | 1939 |
| Fate: | Scuttled 3 May 1945 |
| Status: | Sunk |
| General characteristics | |
| Displacement: | 1044 tons surfaced 1375 tons submerged |
| Length: | 86.7 m |
| Beam: | 6.80 m |
| Draught: | 4.10 m |
| Propulsion: | 2 shaft Burmeister & Wain Diesel engines, 4600 hp, Brown Boverei electric motors 1300 hp |
| Speed: | 18 knots surfaced 8.4 knots full load |
| Range: | 13,000 nm surfaced 10 knots 75 nm submerged 4 knots |
| Test depth: | 100 m |
| Complement: | 47 |
| Armament: | 6 553mm torpedo tubes, (4 bow, 2 stern), 1 - 105mm gun, 1 - 20mm gun, 40 mines |
U-A was the official call-sign of one of fourteen U-Boats that made up the Foreign U-Boats of the Nazi German Kriegsmarine during World War II. Built at Kiel as one of four submarines of the Ay class for Turkey, the Batiray as she was to have been named, was not handed over to the Turkish Navy but commissioned into the German Navy in 1939. Two sister-ships the Saldiray and Atilay had been delivered in June 1939. One boatYildiray was built slowly in a Turkish shipyard.[1]. The design was a modification of the Type IX to fit Turkish requirements. Two of Turkish boats served in the Turkish Navy until 1957, but Atilay was lost in a training exercise off Canakkale.
Contents |
[edit] Service
U-A was commissioned on 30 April 1939 under the initial command of Hans Cohausz, and later Hans Eckerman. She was suppposed to be used as a minelayer by the Turkish, but the Germans used her like a type IX U-boat.
U-A was attacked on 8 March 1941 by the destroyer HMS Wolverine, but survived. During her service, she sank seven allied ships, including the British 13,950 ton armed merchant cruiser RMS Andania. Only nine ships in total were destroyed by the Foreign U-Boat corps, U-A destroying seven of those while damaging another three.
She was decommissioned and scuttled on 3 May 1945, as the war was drawing to a close.
[edit] See also
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