HMS G8: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Ship Image |
{{Infobox Ship Image |
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|Ship image= [[File:G9 at Scapa.jpg|300px]] |
|Ship image= [[File:G9 at Scapa.jpg|300px]] |
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|Ship caption= [[Royal Navy G class submarine |
|Ship caption= [[Royal Navy G class submarine (HMS G9)]] |
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{{Infobox Ship Career |
{{Infobox Ship Career |
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'''HMS ''G8''''' was a [[British G class submarine]] of the [[Royal Navy]] from [[World War I]]. |
'''HMS ''G8''''' was a [[British G class submarine]] of the [[Royal Navy]] from [[World War I]]. |
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==War service== |
==War service== |
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Like the rest of her class, ''G8'''s role was to patrol the [[North Sea]] in search of German [[U-boats]]. |
Like the rest of her class, ''G8'''s role was to patrol the [[North Sea]] in search of German [[U-boats]]. |
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G8 belonged to X Flotilla (Tees) during her service, but also operated out of Scapa Flow during most of 1917 (X Flotilla). Her patrol areas were from North of Shetland to Norway, Skagerrak, Kattegat and Horns Reef. She also did one patrol out of Harwich from IX Flotilla in August 1916, before joining the Tees-Flotilla. |
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Her two COs where: Lt. Charles de Burgh (30/06/16 to 30/07/17) and Lt. John F. Tryon (30/07/17 to 14/01/18). |
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Her last patrol commenced from Tees on 27/12/1917, leaving at 15.00 hours together with G12 and the destroyer Medea for the Kattgat, station being East of Heesele on daytime, North of Lyse LT during the night. |
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She was ordered to start her voyage back on 03/01/18 or possibly 48 hours later, returning to Tees on or about 06/01/18 and was officially declared missing on 14/01/1918. |
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==Loss== |
==Loss== |
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''G8'' was lost in the [[North Sea]] on or around the 14th January 1918; the reason remains unknown. |
''G8'' was lost in the [[North Sea]] on or around the 14th January 1918; the reason remains unknown. |
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==Disvovery and salvage== |
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==Salvage== |
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The wreck was found in 47m (154ft) of water off the Danish coast near Jutland. A Danish salvage crew raised the 11-tonne bronze conning tower of the vessel in August of that year. |
The wreck was found in 47m (154ft) of water off the Danish coast near Jutland. A Danish salvage crew raised the 11-tonne bronze conning tower of the vessel in August of that year. |
Revision as of 15:21, 29 July 2015
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History | |
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Name | HMS G8 |
Builder | Vickers |
Laid down | 18 December 1914 |
Launched | 1 April 1916 |
Commissioned | 30 June 1916 |
Fate | Lost 14 January 1918 |
General characteristics | |
Displacement | Surfaced / Submerged: 703 tons / 837 tons |
Length | 57.5 m |
Beam | 6.92 m |
Draught | 4.15 m |
Propulsion | Twin-shaft, 2 x 800 bhp Vickers diesel, 2 x 840 shp electric motors |
Speed | Surfaced / Submerged: 14.5 knots (27 km/h) / 10.0 knots |
Range | 44.14 tons of fuel oil giving 3,160 nm surfaced at 10 knots (19 km/h). 95 nm submerged, at 3 knots (6 km/h). |
Complement | 31 |
Armament | Torpedoes: 2 x 18" bow tubes, 2 x 18" beam tubes, 1 x 21" stern tube. 10 torpedoes in total. Guns: 1 x 3" 10 cwt. Mk.1 Elswick Quick Fire High Angle {QFHA}, forward. 1 x 12 pdr. 8 cwt. Mk. 1 gun HA mounting, aft. |
HMS G8 was a British G class submarine of the Royal Navy from World War I.
War service
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/19/Hms_g8_submarine.jpg/220px-Hms_g8_submarine.jpg)
Like the rest of her class, G8's role was to patrol the North Sea in search of German U-boats.
G8 belonged to X Flotilla (Tees) during her service, but also operated out of Scapa Flow during most of 1917 (X Flotilla). Her patrol areas were from North of Shetland to Norway, Skagerrak, Kattegat and Horns Reef. She also did one patrol out of Harwich from IX Flotilla in August 1916, before joining the Tees-Flotilla.
Her two COs where: Lt. Charles de Burgh (30/06/16 to 30/07/17) and Lt. John F. Tryon (30/07/17 to 14/01/18).
Her last patrol commenced from Tees on 27/12/1917, leaving at 15.00 hours together with G12 and the destroyer Medea for the Kattgat, station being East of Heesele on daytime, North of Lyse LT during the night.
She was ordered to start her voyage back on 03/01/18 or possibly 48 hours later, returning to Tees on or about 06/01/18 and was officially declared missing on 14/01/1918.
Loss
G8 was lost in the North Sea on or around the 14th January 1918; the reason remains unknown.
Disvovery and salvage
The G8 was found and partly raised by wreck hunters after 93 years at the bottom of the North Sea in 2011.
The wreck was found in 47m (154ft) of water off the Danish coast near Jutland. A Danish salvage crew raised the 11-tonne bronze conning tower of the vessel in August of that year.
References
- Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8.