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词条 HMS X1
释义

  1. Description

     Armament  Propulsion 

  2. Career

  3. See also

  4. Notes

  5. References

  6. Further reading

  7. External links

{{For|the midget submarine of the Second World War|X class submarine}}{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2017}}{{Use British English|date=April 2017}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=Englantilainen sukellusvene X1.jpgShip caption=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=Ship country=United KingdomShip flag=Ship class=Ship name=HM Submarine X1Ship ordered=Ship awarded=Ship builder=HM Dockyard ChathamShip laid down=2 November 1921Ship launched=16 November 1923Ship christened=Ship acquired=Ship commissioned=December 1925Ship recommissioned=Ship decommissioned=1936Ship in service=Ship out of service=Ship renamed=Ship reclassified=Ship refit=Ship captured=Ship struck=Ship reinstated=Ship fate=Scrapped at Pembroke, 12 December 1936Ship status=Ship homeport=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=2780|LT|t}} surfaced
  • {{convert|3600|LT|t}} submerged
363|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on}}29|ft|9|in|m|abbr=on}}15|ft|m|abbr=on}}3000|bhp|kW|lk=in|abbr=on}} total
  • 2 × MAN diesel engines, {{convert|1200|bhp|kW|abbr=on}}
  • 2 × GEC electric motors, {{convert|1000|bhp|kW}} each
19.5|kn|lk=in}} surfaced
  • {{convert|9|kn}} submerged
12400|nmi|abbr=on|lk=in}} at {{convert|12|kn}}, {{convert|18700|nmi|abbr=on}} at {{convert|8|kn}}
  • Submerged: {{convert|50|nmi|abbr=on}} at {{convert|4|kn}}
350|ft|abbr=on}}Ship complement=111 (11 officers and 100 ratings)Ship armament=*6 × 21 inch (533 mm) bow torpedo tubes
  • 2 × twin {{cvt|5.25|in}} guns
  • 2 × {{convert|0.303|in|abbr=on}} machine guns
Ship notes=
}}

HM Submarine X1 was conceived and designed as a submersible commerce raider for the Royal Navy; at the time of her launching she was the largest submarine in the world. For Britain, the idea of a submarine cruiser had been proposed as early as 1915, but the type was not put into practice until 1921. X1, which was based on the uncompleted German U-173 class of 2,000-ton "U-cruisers", was laid down on 2 November 1921 at the Naval Dockyard Chatham and completed on 23 September 1925, commissioning in December 1925.

The 1922 Washington Naval Treaty, of which Britain was a signatory, did not ban submarines but it did ban their use against merchant ships, which was X1{{'}}s unacknowledged purpose; its armament had been designed to successfully engage the classes of vessels likely to be escorting convoys, such as destroyers and frigates. Therefore, a certain amount of secrecy surrounded X1, the government even going to the lengths of taking a national newspaper to court over its pictures of the new submarine following her launch, all copies of the paper being seized.

Description

The X1{{'}}s {{convert|1|in|adj=on}} thick pressure hull was {{convert|19|ft|7.5|in}} in diameter amidships, and was divided into 10 water-tight compartments. This was almost completely surrounded by her external hull, which also contained the main ballast tanks and most of her fuel. Her intended maximum diving depth was {{convert|500|ft}}, but was reduced to {{convert|350|ft}} once in service.[1]

She was expected to sink her targets using gunfire and so was given four {{convert|5.2|in|adj=on}} guns to be able to defeat a destroyer or armed merchant ship, although she was fitted with six bow tubes for {{convert|21|in|adj=on}} torpedoes to supplement her guns.[2]

Armament

X1 carried four QF 5.2 inch Mk I guns in twin unarmoured turrets, one forward and one aft of the conning tower. They had a range of about {{convert|16000|yd}}. A circular trunk ran from each mounting to the magazine in the pressure hull which contained 100 rounds per gun. A working chamber which was {{convert|10|ft}} in diameter encircled the trunk between the pressure hull and the gun mount.[1] Her ammunition hoists were problematic and could not sustain the desired rate of fire of six rounds per gun per minute. Special ballast tanks were used to compensate for the loss of weight as ammunition was fired. Working and control of the guns required no less than 58 men.[3] The fire-control tower was in the middle of the conning tower and had a top section that could be raised {{convert|2|ft}} when in use. The upper control room was between the tower and the pressure hull. Just aft of the control room was the rangefinding room, with a {{convert|9|ft|adj=on}} rangefinder on the bridge that could be raised {{convert|8|ft}}.[1]

Her six torpedo tubes came from a cancelled L-class submarine and she was provided with one reload for each tube. It took some 24 minutes to reload them all because space in the torpedo room was restricted.[3]

Propulsion

The main engines were two 8-cylinder Admiralty diesel engines with a total output of {{convert|3000|hp|kW}}. Two auxiliary {{convert|1200|hp|kW|adj=on}} MAN diesel engines taken from U-126 were installed for battery-charging purposes. For underwater propulsion, two GEC electric motors of {{convert|1000|hp|kW}} each were fitted. It was hoped to achieve over {{convert|8000|hp|kW}} using both diesels and electric motors together, but the highest power achieved (during a full power trial in March 1926) was {{convert|7135|hp|kW}}. She had three groups of batteries, each with 110 cells weighing a total of {{convert|70|LT|t}}.[4] These batteries were also fitted with water filled cooling tubes, jackets, centrifugal pumps and finned heat exchangers (the first recorded use of battery cooling) to reduce core temperatures during aggressive charge and discharge cycles.

In theory she could make {{convert|19.5|kn|km/h}} on the surface, and at economical speed she had a greater range than normal cruisers, but both sets of diesel engines suffered from continual mechanical problems that reduced her speed and range.[4] The X1{{'}}s average diving time (to periscope depth) was 2 minutes 20 seconds. Her handling underwater was considered superior to other submarines of the period.[5]

Career

After X1 was commissioned in December 1925 and accepted in April 1926 she made a voyage to Gibraltar after which her main engine drive wheels were found to be damaged. After repairs she was sent to the Mediterranean Sea. Her starboard camshaft driveshaft broke during a full-power run in January 1928 and a new set of gears was needed, but after refitting at Malta her port camshaft driveshaft broke in the same place in April 1928. By 1930 her commanding officer reported "internal arrangements not very satisfactory because of overcrowding with auxiliary machinery, accommodation is cramped, ventilation poor and the ship suffers from humidity, diving arrangements good."[4] Both the main and auxiliary engines were troublesome and she spent most of her time under repair, before being laid up.[4] X1 was placed in reserve after 1930, before she was finally scrapped at Pembroke on 12 December 1936.[5]

See also

  • British M-class submarine — an earlier attempt at a large gun-armed submarine
  • SM U-139 - U-139 class (Projekt 46); one of three German First World War submarine cruisers
  • Surcouf — a similar French large gun-armed submarine

Notes

1. ^Brown 1982, p. 232
2. ^Akermann 2002, p. 217
3. ^Akermann 2002, p. 218
4. ^Brown 1982 p. 233
5. ^Akermann 2002, p. 220

References

  • {{cite book|last=Akermann|first=Paul|title=Encyclopaedia of British Submarines 1901-1955|edition=reprint of the 1989|year=2002|publisher=Periscope Publishing|location=Penzance, Cornwall|isbn=1-904381-05-7}}
  • {{cite book|last=Brown|first=David K.|chapter=X1-Cruiser Submarine|editor=John Roberts|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|location=London|date=1982|title=Warship VI|volume=VI|pages=232–233|isbn=0-85177-265-X}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book | last = Compton-Hall | first = Richard | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Submarine Warfare, Monsters and Midgets | publisher = Blandford Press | year = 1985 | location =Poole, Dorset, England | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-7137-1389-5}}
  • {{cite book | last = Branfill-Cook | first = Roger | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = X.1 The Royal Navy's Mystery Submarine | publisher = Seaforth Publishing | year = 2012 | location =Barnsley, S. Yorkshire, England | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 978-1-84832-161-8}}

External links

  • Submariners.co.uk Boat database
  • picture of X-1 under construction at Chatham
  • History of X-1
{{good article}}{{DEFAULTSORT:X1}}

3 : Submarines of the Royal Navy|1923 ships|Surface-underwater ships

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