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V-boats
*** Shopping-Tip: V-boats
{| style="margin:0 auto;" align=center width=75% class="toccolours"
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V-boats
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USS Barracuda (SS-163)|Barracuda |
USS Bass (SS-164)|Bass |
USS Bonita (SS-165)|Bonita
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USS Argonaut (SS-166)|Argonaut
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USS Narwhal (SS-167)|Narwhal |
USS Nautilus (SS-168)|Nautilus
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USS Dolphin (SS-169)|Dolphin
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USS Cachalot (SS-170)|Cachalot |
USS Cuttlefish (SS-171)|Cuttlefish
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List of submarines of the United States Navy'
'List of submarine classes of the United States Navy
|}
The
V-boats were a group of nine submarines built between
World War I and
World War II for the
United States Navy. They were not a
ship class in the usual sense of a series of nearly-identical ships built from the same design, but because no other boats were being built during that time, the term "V-boats" is used to include these five classes of submarines.
Originally called USS
V-1 through
V-9 (SS-163 through SS-171), the nine submarines were renamed in
1931 as
USS Barracuda (SS-163)|Barracuda,
USS Bass (SS-164)|Bass,
USS Bonita (SS-165)|Bonita,
USS Argonaut (SS-166)|Argonaut,
USS Narwhal (SS-167)|Narwhal,
USS Nautilus (SS-168)|Nautilus,
USS Dolphin (SS-169)|Dolphin,
USS Cachalot (SS-170)|Cachalot, and
USS Cuttlefish (SS-171)|Cuttlefish, respectively. All served in
World War II, six of them on war patrols in the central Pacific.
Argonaut was lost to enemy action.
Background
In the early
1910s, only a dozen years after
USS Holland (SS-1)|Holland inaugurated the Navy's undersea force, naval strategists had already begun to wish for submarines that could operate in closer collaboration with the surface fleet than the Navy's existing classes, which had been designed primarily for coastal defense. These notional "fleet" submarines would necessarily be larger and better armed, but primarily, they would need a surface speed of some 21 knots to be able to maneuver with the
battleships and
cruisers of the line.
In the summer of
1913,
Electric Boat's chief naval architect, former naval constructor Lawrence Y. Spear, proposed two preliminary fleet-boat designs for consideration in the Navy's
1914 program. In the ensuing authorization of eight submarines, Congress specified that one should "be of a seagoing type to have a surface speed of not less than twenty knots." This first fleet boat, laid down in June
1916, was named
USS T-1 (SS-52)|Schley after
Spanish-American War hero
Winfield Scott Schley. With a displacement of 1,106 tons surfaced, 1,487 tons submerged, on a length of 270 feet (82 m),
Schley (later
AA-1, and finally
T-1) was twice as large as any previous U.S. submarine. To achieve the required surface speed, two tandem 1,000-horsepower (0.75 MW) diesel engines on each shaft drove twin screws, and a separate diesel generator was provided for charging batteries. Although
Schley and two sisters authorized in
1915 --
USS T-2 (SS-60)|T-2 (originally
AA-2), and
USS T-3 (SS-61)|T-3 (originally
AA-3) -- all made their design speed of 20 knots, insoluble torsional vibration problems with their tandem engines made them very troublesome ships, and they were decommissioned in
1922 and
1923 after a service life of only a few years.
In
1916, well before this
United States T class submarine|T class debacle transpired, Congress authorized 58 coastal submarines and nine additional "fleet" boats. Three of the larger 800-ton coastal boats eventually became competing prototypes for the long-lived, 51-member
S class submarine. The nine "fleet boats" became the "V-boats," built between
S class submarine. The nine "fleet boats" became the "V-boats," built between
1921_and
1934, and in fact, they were the only U.S. submarines produced in that period.
V-1 through V-3 -- the Barracudas
The first three V-boats were funded in fiscal year
1919, laid down at the
Portsmouth Navy Yard in October and November
1921, and commissioned somewhat less than a year apart between
1924 and
1926. Significantly,
V-1,
V-2, and
V-3 were the only members of the class designed to satisfy the Navy's original "fleet-boat" requirement for high surface speed. These were large and powerfully-engined submarines, displacing 2,119 tons surfaced and 2,506 tons submerged on a length of 342 feet (104 m). The propulsion plant was divided between two separate engine rooms -- forward and aft of the control room -- with two 2,250-horsepower (1.68 MW) main-propulsion diesels aft, and two independent 1,000-horsepower (0.75 MW) diesel generators forward. The latter were primarily for charging batteries, but to reach maximum surface speed, they could augment the mechanically-coupled main-propulsion engines by driving the 1,200-horsepower (0.90 MW) electric motors in parallel. The three boats were partially double-hulled and fitted forward with buoyancy tanks inside a bulbous bow for better surface sea-keeping. They were armed with six torpedo tubes -- four forward and two aft -- plus a five-inch/51-caliber deck gun.
Unfortunately, the operational performance of the first three V-boats was only mediocre. Designed for 21 knots on the surface, they only made 18.7, and also failed to make their submerged design speed of 9 knots. As built, they were somewhat too heavy forward, which made them poor sea boats, even after replacing the original deck guns with smaller 3-inch/50-caliber models to save weight. Moreover, both the main propulsion diesel engines and their original electric motors were notoriously unreliable, and full-power availability was rare. Renamed
Barracuda,
Bass, and
Bonita in
1931, they were decommissioned in
1937, and only the imminence of
World War II provided a reprieve, in preparation for which they were recommissioned in September
1940. Just before Pearl Harbor, the three boats were transferred to Coco Solo, Panama Canal Zone, and each made a number of defensive war patrols -- without seeing any action -- off the approaches to the
Panama Canal.
All three boats were overhauled in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in late
1942 and early
1943 and converted to cargo submarines by removing both torpedo tubes and main engines, thereby leaving them solely dependent on their diesel generators for propulsion. Because this rendered the boats severely under-powered, they apparently never served operationally in their cargo-carrying role but instead were relegated to training duties at New London until just before the end of the war in
1945. After decommissioning,
Barracuda and
Bonita were scrapped, and
Bass was scuttled as a sonar target near
Block Island.
V-4 -- Argonaut
Displacing 4,164 tons submerged,
V-4, later
Argonaut, was both the largest submarine the Navy ever built before the advent of nuclear power and the only U.S. submarine specifically designed as a minelayer. Her configuration, and that of the following
V-5 and
V-6, resulted from an evolving strategic concept that increasingly emphasized the possibility of a naval war with Japan in the far western Pacific. This factor, and the implications of the
1922 Washington Naval Treaty, suggested the need for long-range submarine "cruisers," or "strategic scouts," as well as long-range minelayers, for which long endurance, not high speed, was most important. Funded in fiscal year
1925, laid down at Portsmouth in May of that year, and commissioned in April
1928,
V-4 was 381 feet long overall and carried four 21-inch torpedo tubes forward and two 40-inch mine-laying chutes and their associated mechanical handling equipment aft. Considerable engine-room volume was sacrificed to achieve an internal payload of 60 specially-designed Mark XI moored mines, and consequently, the main propulsion diesels were limited to a total of 2,800 shaft horsepower (2.09 MW), yielding only 15 knots on the surface.
An over-large, under-powered, and one-of-a-kind submarine,
Argonaut was never particularly successful but stayed in commission all through the
1930s. Early in
World War II, she was re-engined at Mare Island to increase her main propulsion horsepower to 3,600 (2.68 MW), and additionally received two external aft-firing torpedo tubes. Then, at
Pearl Harbor, having never laid a mine in anger, her mine-laying gear was stripped out to facilitate conversion to a troop-carrying submarine. In that guise, she participated in the
commando assault on Japanese-held
Makin Atoll by Carlson's Raiders in August
1942. In transferring to
Brisbane,
Australia late that year,
Argonaut was diverted to a war patrol near
Bougainville in the northern
Solomon Islands and lost with all hands on
10 January 1943 after attacking a heavily defended Japanese convoy.
V-5 and V-6 — Narwhal and Nautilus
In their overall appearance and dimensions,
V-5, later
Narwhal and
V-6, later
Nautilus were similar to
Argonaut and constituted "submarine cruiser" counterparts at least partially inspired by German success with long-range submarine commerce raiders in
World War I. Endurance, sea-keeping, increased torpedo capacity, and large deck guns were emphasized at the cost of high speed; and originally, a small scouting seaplane was to be carried in a water-tight hangar abaft the
conning tower. The Navy had experimented with seaplanes on submarines with a prototype hangar installation on
USS S-1 (SS-105)|S-1 during the mid-
1920s. However, the resulting increase in scouting capability was significantly offset by several additional dangers to the host submarine, and the initiative was dropped.
The two double-hulled boats displaced 2,730 tons on the surface and 3,900 underwater on a length of 370 feet (113 m). They displayed prominent "surface-ship" characteristics, notably high freeboard and an expansive deck structure.
Powered by two ten-cylinder, two-cycle, 2,350-horsepower (1.75 MW) MAN (Maschinenfabrik-Augsburg-Nürnberg (MAN) was a German firm that built many of the engines used in German U-boats during
World War I, from whom the U.S. Navy purchased the rights to build MAN diesels domestically for their own submarines.)
diesel engines, they also had a pair of smaller 450-horsepower (0.34 MW) diesel generators for charging batteries or augmenting the main propulsion engines on the surface. On trials, the two boats achieved nearly 17½ knots surfaced and 8 knots submerged, and their claimed endurance was 18,000 miles (29,000 km) at 10 knots. In addition to the customary torpedo tubes -- four forward and two aft with over 30 reloads -- they (and
Argonaut) carried two six-inch/53-caliber deck guns, the largest ever mounted on U.S. submarines.
Funded in
1926 and commissioned in
1930,
V-5 and
V-6 emerged as too large and unwieldy for fully successful operation: slow to dive, hard to maneuver, and easy to detect. Nonetheless, as
Narwhal and
Nautilus, they served usefully in the
1930s, and just before
World War II,
Nautilus was modified to carry 20,000 gallons of aviation gasoline for refueling seaplanes at sea. Early in the war, each was re-fitted with four General Motors 1,600-horsepower diesels and four additional external torpedo tubes, and despite their age and inherent design flaws, they went on to compile enviable war records.
Narwhal completed 15 successful war patrols and
Nautilus 14, and between them, they are credited with sinking 13 enemy ships for a total of 35,000 tons. Somewhat more serendipitously, their large size made them useful for carrying both troops and cargo on covert missions. Thus,
Nautilus joined with
Argonaut in transporting Carlson’s Raiders to
Makin, and then with
Narwhal, landed a strong detachment of
United States Army Scouts on
Attu in the
Aleutian Islands preparatory to the main landing that regained that island from the Japanese in May
1943. For the final two years of the war, the two boats were devoted almost exclusively to clandestine insertion and retrieval operations behind enemy lines, particularly in preparation for the U.S. campaign to retake the
Philippines.
With the end of the war in sight,
Narwhal and
Nautilus were withdrawn from service in April and June
1945, respectively, and sold for breaking up soon thereafter.
Narwhal's two 6-inch guns are retained as a memorial at the Naval Submarine Base New London.
V-7 -- Dolphin
The penultimate design in the V-boat series was laid down at Portsmouth in June
1930 and emerged as
USS Dolphin (SS-169)|Dolphin
(formerly
V-7) two years later. With a length of 319 feet (97 m) and a displacement only a little more than half that of her three predecessors,
Dolphin was clearly an attempt to strike a happy medium between those latter ships and earlier S-class submarines, which were little more than large coastal boats. The general arrangement of propulsion machinery was identical to that of
V-5 and
V-6, but even with a surface displacement of only 1,718 tons,
Dolphin&
- 8217;s scaled-down main engines, at 1,750 horsepower (1.30 MW) each, could only just deliver the surface speed of the larger ships, and her endurance and torpedo load-out were much reduced. Interestingly, however, Dolphin’s size and weight were very nearly ideal for the range and duration of the war-patrols that became customary in the Pacific during World War II, and indeed, the war-time Gato class submarine, Balao class submarine, and Tench class submarine classes had similar dimensions.
Early in the war,
Dolphin herself made three patrols from
Pearl Harbor without notable distinction, and her deteriorating material condition soon led to restricting her to training duties, first in
Hawaii, and then in
New London, Connecticut, for the duration of the war. She was decommissioned in October
1945 and sold for scrapping a year later.
V-8 and V-9 -- Cachalot and Cuttlefish
Even before
V-5 and
V-6 had been completed and
V-7 laid down, submarine officer opinion had begun to shift in favor of smaller boats similar to Germany's 1,200-ton
U-135 design from
World War I.
Then, when the
London Naval Treaty of
1930 for the first time imposed international limits on total submarine tonnage, the incentive to build smaller ships became especially compelling. (The restrictions of the London Naval Treaty were a factor in the disposal in
1930 of
T-1,
T-2, and
T-3, which had been laid up for nearly a decade. But by special agreement,
Argonaut,
Narwhal, and
Nautilus were exempted from the treaty limitations.)
The result was the two smallest V-boats,
Cachalot (originally
V-8) and
Cuttlefish (originally
V-9), funded in fiscal year
1932. At 271 feet (83 m) overall and only 1,130 tons surface displacement,
Cachalot and
Cuttlefish were even smaller than the
United States T class submarine|T-boats of 15 years earlier. The engineering plant consisted of two innovative, MAN-designed, compact main engines supposedly capable of delivering 1,535 horsepower (1.14 MW) each, plus a single diesel generator rated at 440 horsepower (0.33 MW). Although the boats approached 17 knots on trials, the new MAN engines failed repeatedly from excessive vibration and were replaced in
1938 by General Motors diesels with reduction gearing.
Perhaps of most interest was the Navy's assignment of
Cuttlefish to the
Electric Boat Company, the first submarine award to a private yard since the last of the
S class submarine in
S class submarine in
1921._Accordingly,
Cuttlefish differed from her Portsmouth-built sister,
Cachalot, in many respects, including more spacious internal arrangements, the first installation of air conditioning on a U.S. submarine, and the first partial use of welding (vice riveting) in hull fabrication. Moreover,
Cachalot and
Cuttlefish served as the first test beds for the Mark I torpedo data computer that revolutionized underwater fire control in the mid-
1930s.
Unfortunately, because small size severely limited their speed, endurance, and weapons load, neither boat was successful under the conditions of the Pacific war. Each did three scoreless war patrols in the central and western Pacific, and
Cachalot did one in
Alaskan waters, but by late
1942, it was clear both were out-classed and worn out, and they finished the war at New London as training ships. The two were decommissioned in October
1945 and broken up several years later.
Conclusion
By
21st century standards, the Navy's exploitation of the Congressional
"fleet-boat" authorization of
1916 to build five vastly different submarine designs in a series that ended only in
1934 may seem surprising or even disingenuous. However, as the only U.S. submarines built during an entire decade of shifting and often-contradictory operational concepts, the nine V-boats could hardly have been expected to be homogeneous. But the relative freedom that the Navy was granted to try so many novel submarine approaches in so few years may only have been matched subsequently in the initial era of the nuclear-propulsion program. Except for
Narwhal and
Nautilus -- and these for unexpected reasons -- none of the V-boats achieved significant success either in peacetime or under combat conditions in
World War II. But the willingness to experiment -- or perhaps it was only shooting in the dark -- that produced the V-boats in all their interesting variety paid off handsomely in a host of lessons-learned that were quickly applied to the subsequent succession of true "fleet-boat" designs -- the
United States Porpoise class submarine|Porpoise,
Shark class submarine,
Salmon class submarine,
Sargo class submarine, and
Gato class submarine classes.
References
This article was based on "The Navy's Variegated V-Class: Out of One,
Many?" by Edward C. Whitman, published in the Fall 2003 issue of
Undersea Warfare: The Official Magazine of the U.S. Submarine Force
The magazine's masthead states:
:
Authorization: UNDERSEA WARFARE is published quarterly from appropriated funds by authority of the Chief of Naval Operations in accordance with NPPR P-35. The Secretary of the Navy has determined that this publication is necessary in the transaction of business required by law of the Department of the Navy. Use of funds for printing this publication has been approved by the Navy Publications and Printing Policy Committee. Reproductions are encouraged. Controlled circulation.
Ships
In
1920, the Navy adopted a numbering scheme that distinguished between coastal and general purpose boats, designated "SS"; and fleet boats, designated "SF." Accordingly,
T-1 through
T-3 were originally designated SF-1 through SF-3, and
V-1 through
V-9 were designated SF-4 through SF-12.
V-4 was also designated SM-1 at one time, indicative of her mine-laying role.
- V-1 (SF-4): USS Barracuda (SS-163)|Barracuda (SS-163)
- V-2 (SF-5): USS Bass (SS-164)|Bass (SS-164)
- V-3 (SF-6): USS Bonita (SS-165)|Bonita (SS-165)
- V-4 (SF-7/SM-1): USS Argonaut (SS-166)|Argonaut (SS-166)
- V-5 (SF-8/SC-1): USS Narwhal (SS-167)|Narwahl (SS-167)
- V-6 (SF-9/SC-2): USS Nautilus (SS-168)|Nautilus (SS-168)
- V-7 (SF-10/SC-3): USS Dolphin (SS-169)|Dolphin (SS-169)
- V-8 (SF-11/SC-4): USS Cachalot (SS-170)|Cachalot (SS-170)
- V-9 (SF-12/SC-5):
*** Shopping-Tip: V-boats