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British K-class submarine

The K-class submarines were a class of steam-propelled submarines of the Royal Navy designed in 1913. Intended as large, fast vessels with the endurance and speed to operate with the battle fleet, they gained notoriety and the nickname of "Kalamity class" for being involved in many accidents. Of the 18 built, none were lost through enemy action, but six sank, with significant loss of life, in accidents. Only one ever engaged an enemy vessel, K-7 hitting a U-boat amidships, though the torpedo failed to explode with what has been described as typical "K" luck; K-7 escaped retaliation by steaming away at speed.[2]

Class overview
NameK class
Builders
Operators Royal Navy
In commission1917–1931
Planned21
Completed17
General characteristics
TypeSubmarine
Displacement
  • 1,980 tons surfaced
  • 2,566 tons dived
Length339 ft (103 m)
Beam26 ft 6 in (8.08 m)
Draught20 ft 11 in (6.38 m)
Propulsion
Speed
  • 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph) surfaced
  • 8 knots (15 km/h; 9.2 mph) submerged
Range
  • Surface: 800 nautical miles (1,500 km; 920 mi) at maximum speed
  • 12,500 nmi (23,200 km; 14,400 mi) at 10 kn (19 km/h; 12 mph)
  • Submerged: 8 nmi (15 km; 9.2 mi) at 8 kn (15 km/h; 9.2 mph)
Complement59 (6 officers and 53 ratings)
Armament
HMS K4 aground on Walney Island

The class found favour with Commodore Roger Keyes, then Inspector Captain of Submarines, and with admirals Sir John Jellicoe, Commander-in-Chief British Grand Fleet, and Sir David Beatty, Commander-in-Chief Battlecruiser Squadrons. An opponent of the class was Admiral Jacky Fisher, later First Sea Lord, who on the class' suggestion in 1913 had responded 'The most fatal error imaginable would be to put steam engines in submarines.'[citation needed]

Thinking about submarines and their use at the time was still in its infancy. Submarines, which later acted only by stealth, are no longer expected to be within a surface warship formation.

Design and development edit

In 1913, a design outline was prepared for a new class of submarine which could operate with the surface fleet, sweeping ahead of it in a fleet action. It was intended that the submarines would get around the back of the German High Seas Fleet and ambush it as it retreated from the superior British Grand Fleet.

The boats were to be 339 feet (103 m) long and displace 1,700 tons on the surface. It was decided not to proceed until results from trials of two prototypes, Nautilus and Swordfish, had taken place. Following the trials with Nautilus, the slightly smaller J class (1200 tons) was designed with a conventional diesel propulsion system.

By the middle of 1915 it was clear that the J class would not meet expectations; the triple-screw diesel configuration could only enable them to make 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph) on the surface, less than the 21 kn (39 km/h; 24 mph) of HMS Dreadnought, which would need to be matched to accompany the fleet. It was judged that the only way to give submarines sufficient surface speed to keep up with the fleet was to power them by steam turbines.

The K-class design was resurrected and 21 boats ordered in August at a cost of £340,000 each. Only 17 were constructed, the orders for the last four being cancelled and replaced by orders for the equally large M class. Six improved versions, K22 to K28 were ordered in October 1917, but only K26 was completed by the end of the First World War.

The double hull design had a reserve buoyancy of 32.5 per cent.[a] Although powered on the surface by oil-fired steam turbines, they were also equipped with an 800 hp (600 kW) diesel generator to charge the batteries and provide limited propulsive power in the event of problems with the boilers.

This pushed the displacement up to 1,980 tons on the surface, 2,566 tons submerged. They were equipped with four 18-inch (460 mm) torpedo tubes at the bow, two on either beam and another pair in a swivel mounting on the superstructure for night use. The swivel pair were later removed because they were prone to damage in rough seas. The K-class submarines were fitted with a proper deckhouse, built over and around the conning tower, which gave the crew much better protection than the canvas screens fitted in previous Royal Navy submarines.

The great size of the boats (compared to their predecessors) led to control and depth-keeping problems, particularly as efficient telemotor controls had not yet been developed. This was made worse by the estimated maximum diving depth of 200 feet (61 m) being much less than their overall length. Even a 10-degree angle on the 339-foot-long hull would cause a 59-foot (18 m) difference in depth of the bow and stern, and 30 degrees would produce 170 feet (52 m), which meant that while the stern would almost be on the surface, the bow would almost be at its maximum safe depth. The submarines were made more dangerous because the eight internal bulkheads were designed and tested during development to stand a pressure equivalent to only 70 feet (21 m), risking their collapse if the hull was compromised at a depth below this figure.

Service edit

K3 was the first of the class to be completed in May 1916, and trials revealed numerous problems, such as the aforementioned swivel tubes, and that their low freeboard and great length made them awkward to handle either surfaced or submerged. An early criticism of the class questioned the wisdom of combining such a large hull with so great a surface speed, producing a vessel with the pace of a destroyer and the turning circle of a battlecruiser. Steam power required air intakes, smoke exhausts and funnels—unique on a submarine. One critic said the K-class had "too many holes"; water would pour through these holes if they were not closed tightly.[3]

A dive from steam-powered surface operation normally required 30 minutes.[4] Minimum time needed to secure the main engines, shift to battery motors and dive under emergency conditions was nearly 5 minutes, which, though better than the 15 minutes of the Swordfish prototype, was considered barely adequate. The boiler fires were first extinguished to prevent submerged buildup of fumes; a complicated series of hydraulics and mechanical rods and levers lowered the twin funnels away from each other to a horizontal position in wells in the superstructure as well as simultaneously closing hatches over the funnel uptakes. The main intake ventilators were likewise closed along with sea water connections for condensers and boiler feed. It was considered that with their 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph) of speed the submarines could turn and outrun almost any threat if they were attacked on the surface, dispensing with a need for a rapid dive. This perhaps just excused the fact that the fast 'crash dives' of conventional submarines were unattainable.[citation needed]

The high temperatures in the boiler room were problematical; this was to some extent alleviated by installing bigger fans. Steaming at speed tended to push the bow into the water, making the already poor sea-keeping worse. To fix this a bulbous swan bow was added, which also incorporated a 'quick blowing' ballast tank to improve handling. Nevertheless, there were still problems with seaworthiness, such as that in a heavy storm, sea water could enter the boat through the short twin funnels and put the boiler fires out. The boats suffered numerous accidents, largely caused by their poor manoeuvrability when operating with the surface fleet, including:

 
A bridge window from a K-class submarine
  • K13 sank on 19 January 1917 during sea trials when an intake failed to close whilst diving and her engine room flooded. She was eventually salvaged and recommissioned as K22 in March 1917.[5]
  • K1 collided with K4 off the Danish coast on 18 November 1917 and was scuttled to avoid capture.
  • Two boats were lost in an incident known as the Battle of May Island on 31 January 1918. The cruiser HMS Fearless collided with the head of a line of submarines, K17, which sank in about 8 minutes, whilst other submarines behind her all turned to avoid her. K4 was struck by K6 which almost cut her in half and was then struck by K7 before she finally sank with all her crew. At the same time K22 (the recommissioned K13) and K14 collided although both survived. In just 75 minutes, two submarines had been sunk, three badly damaged and 105 crew killed.
  • K5 was lost due to unknown reasons during a mock battle in the Bay of Biscay on 20 January 1921. Nothing further was heard of her following a signal that she was diving, but wreckage was recovered later that day. It was concluded that she exceeded her safe maximum depth.
  • K15 sank at her mooring in Portsmouth on 25 June 1921. This was caused by hydraulic oil expanding in the hot weather and contracting overnight as the temperature dropped and the consequent loss of pressure causing diving vents to open. The boat flooded through open hatches as it submerged. Prior to this in May of that year the boat had survived taking water into her funnel uptakes which had doused the furnaces and caused her to sink stern first to the bottom. In that case quick action on part of her captain and crew had prevented loss of life.

K16 and K12 were both trapped on the bottom of Gareloch; their crews were luckier than that of K13 in that after several hours submerged they managed to claw their way back to the surface.

K3 held the unofficial record for maximum diving depth (266 feet [81 m]) following an uncontrolled descent to the bottom of the Pentland Firth. The ship managed to surface without further difficulty despite spending an unrecorded period below 'crush depth.'

K4 ran aground on Walney Island in January 1917 and remained stranded there for some time.

Morale was a frequent problem. Submariners were 'Volunteers Only,' and the class reputation as being designated 'K' for Kalamity (or Killer) did little to endear them to their crews, or provide a steady stream of volunteers. Sailors serving aboard the boats blackly dubbed themselves the "Suicide Club."[6]

With a dive time of around 5 minutes (with the record being 3 minutes 25 seconds which was claimed by K8) it allowed the captain the luxury of being able to walk around the superstructure to ensure that the funnels were securely folded. The last, improved, boat, K26 was completed slowly, being commissioned in 1923. She had six 21-inch (530 mm) bow torpedo tubes but retained the 18-inch beam tubes. Her higher casing almost cured the problems of seawater entering the boiler room, and improved ballast tank arrangements cut the diving time to 3 minutes 12 seconds to get to 80 feet (24 m). She also had an increased maximum diving depth of 250 feet (76 m).

 
Depth charge thrower originally fitted to the K class

Most were scrapped between 1921 and 1926 but K26 survived until 1931, then being broken up because her displacement exceeded the limits for submarine displacement in the London Naval Treaty of 1930. K18, K19 and K20 became the new M-class submarines. K21, K23, K24, K25, K27 and K28 were cancelled. Although the concept of a submarine fast enough to operate with a battle fleet eventually fell out of favour, it was still an important consideration in the design of the River class in the late 1920s.

Notes edit

  1. ^ A modern nuclear submarine has a reserve of around 13 per cent[citation needed]
 
A model of a K-class submarine

References edit

  1. ^ Cocker, M. P.; Warne, Frederick (1982). Observer's Directory of Royal Naval Submarines 1901–1982. London. p. 42. ISBN 0723229643.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Edwyn Gray (31 January 2016). British Submarines at War: 1914–1918. Pen and Sword. pp. 220–221. ISBN 978-1-4738-5348-5.
  3. ^ Ian Jack (4 November 2017). "From the K-class to the party boat, submarines have a history of disaster". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  4. ^ Frick, Willis G. (1984). "Sink the Navy". Proceedings. 110 (3). United States Naval Institute: 173.
  5. ^ "The Unlucky K 13 - Shipping Wonders of the World". www.shippingwondersoftheworld.com. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  6. ^ Weintz, Steve (6 November 2015). "His Majesty's Scary Steam Subs". www.WarIsBoring.com. Retrieved 13 November 2015.

Bibliography edit

  • Brown, D.K. (2003). The Grand Fleet, Warship Design and Development 1906–1922. Caxton Editions. ISBN 1-84067-531-4.
  • Cocker, M.P. (1982). Observer's Directory of Royal Naval Submarines 1901–1982, ISBN 0723229643, Frederick Warne, London.
  • Everitt, Don (1999). K Boats: Steam-Powered Submarines in World War I. Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-84037-057-2.
  • Everitt, Don (1963). The K Boats. London: George Harrap.
  • Preston, Antony (2002). World's Worst Warships. Conway's Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-754-6.

External links edit

  • . RN Submarine museum. Archived from the original on 6 September 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  • Jan Meecham (17 April 2017). "The calamity k-class submarines of the First World War". Roger (Jan) Meecham. Retrieved 4 November 2017. Detailed account of the K-class submarines and their disastrous history.

british, class, submarine, other, types, submarine, called, class, class, submarine, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, mor. For other types of submarine called the K class see K class submarine disambiguation This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The K class submarines were a class of steam propelled submarines of the Royal Navy designed in 1913 Intended as large fast vessels with the endurance and speed to operate with the battle fleet they gained notoriety and the nickname of Kalamity class for being involved in many accidents Of the 18 built none were lost through enemy action but six sank with significant loss of life in accidents Only one ever engaged an enemy vessel K 7 hitting a U boat amidships though the torpedo failed to explode with what has been described as typical K luck K 7 escaped retaliation by steaming away at speed 2 HMS K15Class overviewNameK classBuildersHM Dockyard Portsmouth HM Dockyard Devonport Vickers Armstrong Whitworth Fairfield Scotts Beardmore 1 Operators Royal NavyIn commission1917 1931Planned21Completed17General characteristicsTypeSubmarineDisplacement1 980 tons surfaced 2 566 tons divedLength339 ft 103 m Beam26 ft 6 in 8 08 m Draught20 ft 11 in 6 38 m PropulsionTwin 10 500 shp 7 800 kW oil fired Yarrow boilers each powering a Brown Curtis or Parsons geared steam turbines Twin 3 blade 7 ft 6 in 2 29 m screws Four 1 440 hp 1 070 kW electric motors One 800 hp 600 kW Vickers diesel generator for charging batteries on the surface Speed24 knots 44 km h 28 mph surfaced 8 knots 15 km h 9 2 mph submergedRangeSurface 800 nautical miles 1 500 km 920 mi at maximum speed 12 500 nmi 23 200 km 14 400 mi at 10 kn 19 km h 12 mph Submerged 8 nmi 15 km 9 2 mi at 8 kn 15 km h 9 2 mph Complement59 6 officers and 53 ratings Armament4 18 inch 460 mm torpedo tubes beam four 18 inch 450 mm bow tubes plus 8 spare torpedoes 2 BL 4 inch 101 6 mm Mk XI guns 1 3 in 76 mm gun Twin 18 inch deck tubes originally fitted but later removed HMS K4 aground on Walney IslandThe class found favour with Commodore Roger Keyes then Inspector Captain of Submarines and with admirals Sir John Jellicoe Commander in Chief British Grand Fleet and Sir David Beatty Commander in Chief Battlecruiser Squadrons An opponent of the class was Admiral Jacky Fisher later First Sea Lord who on the class suggestion in 1913 had responded The most fatal error imaginable would be to put steam engines in submarines citation needed Thinking about submarines and their use at the time was still in its infancy Submarines which later acted only by stealth are no longer expected to be within a surface warship formation Contents 1 Design and development 2 Service 3 Notes 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksDesign and development editIn 1913 a design outline was prepared for a new class of submarine which could operate with the surface fleet sweeping ahead of it in a fleet action It was intended that the submarines would get around the back of the German High Seas Fleet and ambush it as it retreated from the superior British Grand Fleet The boats were to be 339 feet 103 m long and displace 1 700 tons on the surface It was decided not to proceed until results from trials of two prototypes Nautilus and Swordfish had taken place Following the trials with Nautilus the slightly smaller J class 1200 tons was designed with a conventional diesel propulsion system By the middle of 1915 it was clear that the J class would not meet expectations the triple screw diesel configuration could only enable them to make 19 knots 35 km h 22 mph on the surface less than the 21 kn 39 km h 24 mph of HMS Dreadnought which would need to be matched to accompany the fleet It was judged that the only way to give submarines sufficient surface speed to keep up with the fleet was to power them by steam turbines The K class design was resurrected and 21 boats ordered in August at a cost of 340 000 each Only 17 were constructed the orders for the last four being cancelled and replaced by orders for the equally large M class Six improved versions K22 to K28 were ordered in October 1917 but only K26 was completed by the end of the First World War The double hull design had a reserve buoyancy of 32 5 per cent a Although powered on the surface by oil fired steam turbines they were also equipped with an 800 hp 600 kW diesel generator to charge the batteries and provide limited propulsive power in the event of problems with the boilers This pushed the displacement up to 1 980 tons on the surface 2 566 tons submerged They were equipped with four 18 inch 460 mm torpedo tubes at the bow two on either beam and another pair in a swivel mounting on the superstructure for night use The swivel pair were later removed because they were prone to damage in rough seas The K class submarines were fitted with a proper deckhouse built over and around the conning tower which gave the crew much better protection than the canvas screens fitted in previous Royal Navy submarines The great size of the boats compared to their predecessors led to control and depth keeping problems particularly as efficient telemotor controls had not yet been developed This was made worse by the estimated maximum diving depth of 200 feet 61 m being much less than their overall length Even a 10 degree angle on the 339 foot long hull would cause a 59 foot 18 m difference in depth of the bow and stern and 30 degrees would produce 170 feet 52 m which meant that while the stern would almost be on the surface the bow would almost be at its maximum safe depth The submarines were made more dangerous because the eight internal bulkheads were designed and tested during development to stand a pressure equivalent to only 70 feet 21 m risking their collapse if the hull was compromised at a depth below this figure Service editK3 was the first of the class to be completed in May 1916 and trials revealed numerous problems such as the aforementioned swivel tubes and that their low freeboard and great length made them awkward to handle either surfaced or submerged An early criticism of the class questioned the wisdom of combining such a large hull with so great a surface speed producing a vessel with the pace of a destroyer and the turning circle of a battlecruiser Steam power required air intakes smoke exhausts and funnels unique on a submarine One critic said the K class had too many holes water would pour through these holes if they were not closed tightly 3 A dive from steam powered surface operation normally required 30 minutes 4 Minimum time needed to secure the main engines shift to battery motors and dive under emergency conditions was nearly 5 minutes which though better than the 15 minutes of the Swordfish prototype was considered barely adequate The boiler fires were first extinguished to prevent submerged buildup of fumes a complicated series of hydraulics and mechanical rods and levers lowered the twin funnels away from each other to a horizontal position in wells in the superstructure as well as simultaneously closing hatches over the funnel uptakes The main intake ventilators were likewise closed along with sea water connections for condensers and boiler feed It was considered that with their 24 knots 44 km h 28 mph of speed the submarines could turn and outrun almost any threat if they were attacked on the surface dispensing with a need for a rapid dive This perhaps just excused the fact that the fast crash dives of conventional submarines were unattainable citation needed The high temperatures in the boiler room were problematical this was to some extent alleviated by installing bigger fans Steaming at speed tended to push the bow into the water making the already poor sea keeping worse To fix this a bulbous swan bow was added which also incorporated a quick blowing ballast tank to improve handling Nevertheless there were still problems with seaworthiness such as that in a heavy storm sea water could enter the boat through the short twin funnels and put the boiler fires out The boats suffered numerous accidents largely caused by their poor manoeuvrability when operating with the surface fleet including nbsp A bridge window from a K class submarineK13 sank on 19 January 1917 during sea trials when an intake failed to close whilst diving and her engine room flooded She was eventually salvaged and recommissioned as K22 in March 1917 5 K1 collided with K4 off the Danish coast on 18 November 1917 and was scuttled to avoid capture Two boats were lost in an incident known as the Battle of May Island on 31 January 1918 The cruiser HMS Fearless collided with the head of a line of submarines K17 which sank in about 8 minutes whilst other submarines behind her all turned to avoid her K4 was struck by K6 which almost cut her in half and was then struck by K7 before she finally sank with all her crew At the same time K22 the recommissioned K13 and K14 collided although both survived In just 75 minutes two submarines had been sunk three badly damaged and 105 crew killed K5 was lost due to unknown reasons during a mock battle in the Bay of Biscay on 20 January 1921 Nothing further was heard of her following a signal that she was diving but wreckage was recovered later that day It was concluded that she exceeded her safe maximum depth K15 sank at her mooring in Portsmouth on 25 June 1921 This was caused by hydraulic oil expanding in the hot weather and contracting overnight as the temperature dropped and the consequent loss of pressure causing diving vents to open The boat flooded through open hatches as it submerged Prior to this in May of that year the boat had survived taking water into her funnel uptakes which had doused the furnaces and caused her to sink stern first to the bottom In that case quick action on part of her captain and crew had prevented loss of life K16 and K12 were both trapped on the bottom of Gareloch their crews were luckier than that of K13 in that after several hours submerged they managed to claw their way back to the surface K3 held the unofficial record for maximum diving depth 266 feet 81 m following an uncontrolled descent to the bottom of the Pentland Firth The ship managed to surface without further difficulty despite spending an unrecorded period below crush depth K4 ran aground on Walney Island in January 1917 and remained stranded there for some time Morale was a frequent problem Submariners were Volunteers Only and the class reputation as being designated K for Kalamity or Killer did little to endear them to their crews or provide a steady stream of volunteers Sailors serving aboard the boats blackly dubbed themselves the Suicide Club 6 With a dive time of around 5 minutes with the record being 3 minutes 25 seconds which was claimed by K8 it allowed the captain the luxury of being able to walk around the superstructure to ensure that the funnels were securely folded The last improved boat K26 was completed slowly being commissioned in 1923 She had six 21 inch 530 mm bow torpedo tubes but retained the 18 inch beam tubes Her higher casing almost cured the problems of seawater entering the boiler room and improved ballast tank arrangements cut the diving time to 3 minutes 12 seconds to get to 80 feet 24 m She also had an increased maximum diving depth of 250 feet 76 m nbsp Depth charge thrower originally fitted to the K classMost were scrapped between 1921 and 1926 but K26 survived until 1931 then being broken up because her displacement exceeded the limits for submarine displacement in the London Naval Treaty of 1930 K18 K19 and K20 became the new M class submarines K21 K23 K24 K25 K27 and K28 were cancelled Although the concept of a submarine fast enough to operate with a battle fleet eventually fell out of favour it was still an important consideration in the design of the River class in the late 1920s Notes edit A modern nuclear submarine has a reserve of around 13 per cent citation needed nbsp A model of a K class submarineReferences edit Cocker M P Warne Frederick 1982 Observer s Directory of Royal Naval Submarines 1901 1982 London p 42 ISBN 0723229643 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Edwyn Gray 31 January 2016 British Submarines at War 1914 1918 Pen and Sword pp 220 221 ISBN 978 1 4738 5348 5 Ian Jack 4 November 2017 From the K class to the party boat submarines have a history of disaster The Guardian Retrieved 4 November 2017 Frick Willis G 1984 Sink the Navy Proceedings 110 3 United States Naval Institute 173 The Unlucky K 13 Shipping Wonders of the World www shippingwondersoftheworld com Retrieved 13 August 2020 Weintz Steve 6 November 2015 His Majesty s Scary Steam Subs www WarIsBoring com Retrieved 13 November 2015 Bibliography editBrown D K 2003 The Grand Fleet Warship Design and Development 1906 1922 Caxton Editions ISBN 1 84067 531 4 Cocker M P 1982 Observer s Directory of Royal Naval Submarines 1901 1982 ISBN 0723229643 Frederick Warne London Everitt Don 1999 K Boats Steam Powered Submarines in World War I Airlife Publishing ISBN 1 84037 057 2 Everitt Don 1963 The K Boats London George Harrap Preston Antony 2002 World s Worst Warships Conway s Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 754 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to British K class submarines Submarine losses 1904 to present day RN Submarine museum Archived from the original on 6 September 2014 Retrieved 16 September 2014 Steam Submarines K for Katastrophe Jan Meecham 17 April 2017 The calamity k class submarines of the First World War Roger Jan Meecham Retrieved 4 November 2017 Detailed account of the K class submarines and their disastrous history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British K class submarine amp oldid 1178763976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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