@Assreaver Would be nice when you can specfify why you added tagme to this post. Couldn't find anything missing here.
99% of the time I'm missing tags so I assumed I was missing ones here.
If I were on a PC I would probably have an easier time tagging things but Danbooru is blocked by pretty much everyone so I'm stuck on my phone.
Oh and @DanbooruBlacklist I'm fairly certain they're not even 8", I imagine 12" especially based upon the fact a 20,000 ton cruiser submarine was actually proposed to the USN in 1920 with 12" guns. The torpedo arrangement also reminds me of the WWI Tauchschiff proposal.
>Armament: 6 20cm guns, 14 57cm torpedo tubes (Kind of an odd measurement, never heard of that before), 2 7.5cm guns, 4 20mm guns
That's at least describing the first remodel.
Original design was probably similar, but lacked the 20mm guns, had an extra 2 7.5cm guns, plus two guns I can't identify (Might be more 7.5s, not sure).
I seriously wonder if "57cm" was a typo by the artist. Up until NATO standardization in 1964 the only torpedo calibers France used were 40cm, 45cm and 55cm.
I seriously wonder if "57cm" was a typo by the artist. Up until NATO standardization in 1964 the only torpedo calibers France used were 40cm, 45cm and 55cm.
22.5" (57cm) isn't actually that far off come to think of it. The US had air-launched 22.4" (56.9cm) torpedoes, which were basically shorter and fatter than the typical 17.7" (45cm) torpedo, so presumably these 57cm torpedoes are similar in fashion as compared to the contemporary 21" (53.3cm) torpedoes at the time (Submarines can carry bigger torpedoes). According to NavWeaps this would likely result in longer range but reduced speed. Britain even had battleship-launched 24.5" (62.2cm) oxygen torpedoes. The design heavily influenced the Japanese in their particularly famous (Or infamous?) Type 98 24" (61cm) Torpedo. Then there are 25.6" (65cm) Soviet torpedoes and the bizarre Kanyon program, but I don't count those because they're post-WWII. The largest torpedo known to have ever have been built was apparently 29.5" (75cm) in diameter, though apparently it rarely worked and was abandoned. http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WTGER_PreWWII.php
I'm also pretty sure it's not French. The French didn't use 20cm guns, only 20.3cm ones. In fact, I'm pretty sure the only country that used 20cm guns on a large scale was Japan, and only prior to treaties that allowed them to use 20.3cm ones. I think it's purely fiction, honestly.
The original designs hull color suggests Italian to me. As does the rangefinder on the later design.
Also this sub has two banks of torpedoes tubes on the upper hull. I seem to recall a few subs had that, but it wasn't all that practical, since it seems more like a surface launched torpedo and not re-loadable (easily). More for finishing off prey without needed to use the deck gun, or your usual torpedoes.
I'm also pretty sure it's not French. The French didn't use 20cm guns, only 20.3cm ones. In fact, I'm pretty sure the only country that used 20cm guns on a large scale was Japan, and only prior to treaties that allowed them to use 20.3cm ones. I think it's purely fiction, honestly.
It sure looks like a massively enlarged version of Surcouf to me.
The original designs hull color suggests Italian to me. As does the rangefinder on the later design.
Also this sub has two banks of torpedoes tubes on the upper hull. I seem to recall a few subs had that, but it wasn't all that practical, since it seems more like a surface launched torpedo and not re-loadable (easily). More for finishing off prey without needed to use the deck gun, or your usual torpedoes.
Yeah, the "wedding cake" rangefinder is very distinctive. On the other hand, whoever built it might have chosen the design simply because it creates less drag under the water. But that's only a guess.
I remember the Project 50 Tauchschiff having something similar to that "broadside" torpedo design.