Type 37 torpedo boat

Class overview
Operators: Kriegsmarine
Preceded by: Type 35 torpedo boat
Succeeded by: Elbing-class torpedo boat
Completed: 9
Lost: 3
General characteristics [1]
Type: Torpedo boat
Displacement:
  • 853 tons (standard)
  • 1,098 tons (full load)
Length: 85.20 m
Beam: 8.87 m
Draught:
  • 2.51 m (standard)
  • 3.14 m (full load)
Propulsion:
  • 2 shaft geared Wagner turbines,
  • 4 Wagner boilers 32,000 shp
Speed: 35.5 knots (65.7 km/h)
Range: 1,600 nmi (2,960 km) at 19 knots (35 km/h)
Complement: 119
Armament:
  • 1 × 105 mm L/45 C/34
  • 1 × 37 mm L/83 C/33
  • 5-8 × 20 mm MG L/65
  • 6 × 533 mm torpedo tubes (2×3)
  • 30 mines

The German Type 37 Torpedo Boat (German: Flottentorpedoboot "Fleet Torpedo Boat") were a class of warships built for Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine between 1939 and 1942. They were a development of the Type 35 torpedo boat.

Like the Type 35, they were not considered very successful, their weak gun armament was disliked and the machinery was unreliable and difficult to repair. They also had relatively poor sea-keeping and a weak bridge structure.

These ships served in the North Sea, English Channel, and Baltic Sea.

General characteristics

The Type 37 torpedo boats followed on from the Type 35 torpedo boats, but were similarly unsuccessful. The 1937s incorporated some modifications, including lower pressure turbines, but with little real improvement. They displayed the same limitations as their predecessors, with engines that were unreliable and difficult to repair and maintain in the restricted space of the hull. The low displacement made them unseaworthy. As designed, they also focused on torpedo armament, with a single 10.5 centimetre gun and minimal anti-aircraft protection. The anti-aircraft protection was increased later in the war.

Nine ships were built, all at Schichau-Werke, Elbing. Three were sunk, and one scuttled, by the end of the war. Of the survivors, four were transferred abroad as war reparations and the last was scrapped in Germany.

Ships

All these ships were built by Schichau in Elbing

Ship Launched Commissioned Fate[1]
T13 15 June 1939 31 May 1941 Sunk 10 April 1945 in Skagerrak by air attack.
T14 20 July 1939 14 June 1941 Transferred to France as Dompaire. Stricken 8 November 1951 and scrapped.
T15 16 September 1939 26 June 1941 Sunk 13 December 1943 at Kiel by RAF bombers.
T16 23 November 1938 24 July 1941 Damaged beyond repair, 13 April 1945, while escorting Hansa. Decommissioned and broken up.
T17 13 March 1940 18 August 1941 Transferred to USSR post war, served as destroyer Poryvisty (Порывистый). Later (1952) East German Rosa Luxembourg; broken up 1957.
T18 1 June 1940 22 November 1941 Sunk 17 September 1944; rocket attack by Soviet aircraft near the Åland Islands.
T19 20 July 1940 18 December 1942 Transferred to US post war, then Denmark. Broken up 1951 without re-commissioning.
T20 12 September 1940 5 June 1942 Transferred to France as Baccarat. Stricken 8 November 1951 and scrapped.
T21 21 November 1940 11 July 1942 Transferred to USA post war; scuttled 16 December 1946 in Skagerrak.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Conway's, p 238

References

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