ships needed for Sealion

German Kriegsmarine 1935-1945.
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Andy H
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Post by Andy H »

There's lots to talk about.
Yes, but in a seperate thread, rather than it being lost within a thread ostensibly about Sealion
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Post by Michael N. Ryan »

I believe this would be part of the thread. We've covered the aspects of Sealion and how it might or might not work. We're basicly satisfied that we've covered everyhing in the operations phase.

This is the Outcome of Sealion if it had worked. The Consequences.
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Post by Andy H »

Michael N. Ryan wrote:I believe this would be part of the thread. We've covered the aspects of Sealion and how it might or might not work. We're basicly satisfied that we've covered everyhing in the operations phase.

This is the Outcome of Sealion if it had worked. The Consequences.
Then it belongs in the What If area
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Post by ak74u »

Black Baron wrote:An interesting question to be sure. below is what they did put together for a cross channel trip. 140 tons of material is nuttin to sneeze at. Capture of a usable airfield would be essential to fly in extra supplies. I would imagine U-boats would do commando raids on radar installations prior to launch.



The Naval Landing Crafts - called "Marinefahrprahm" in German were the largest landing craft used by the Kriegsmarine. Although required for Operation Sealion (Invasion of England) in 1940, the first of this transport ships were delivered in 1941. The development of this ship went through several Types (A-D), whose size and armament grew from class to class. They were mainly used for transport and supply duties and not for their initial invasion role and could transport 200 Soldiers or 140 tons of equipment, including Tiger tanks. Marinefahrprahme were used in almost all Kriegsmarine operational areas: the British Channel, the North sea, the Baltic, the Mediterranean and the Caspic and the Black sea

Very shallow draft as well which made it impervious to torpedo attack.

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do you have any pictures of the Marinefahrprahm
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Post by ak74u »

ak74u wrote:
Black Baron wrote:An interesting question to be sure. below is what they did put together for a cross channel trip. 140 tons of material is nuttin to sneeze at. Capture of a usable airfield would be essential to fly in extra supplies. I would imagine U-boats would do commando raids on radar installations prior to launch.



The Naval Landing Crafts - called "Marinefahrprahm" in German were the largest landing craft used by the Kriegsmarine. Although required for Operation Sealion (Invasion of England) in 1940, the first of this transport ships were delivered in 1941. The development of this ship went through several Types (A-D), whose size and armament grew from class to class. They were mainly used for transport and supply duties and not for their initial invasion role and could transport 200 Soldiers or 140 tons of equipment, including Tiger tanks. Marinefahrprahme were used in almost all Kriegsmarine operational areas: the British Channel, the North sea, the Baltic, the Mediterranean and the Caspic and the Black sea

Very shallow draft as well which made it impervious to torpedo attack.

Last

do you have any pictures of the Marinefahrprahm

oh google @#% yeah


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Post by von_noobie »

question how long did it take to build each Marinefahrprahm and how many could germany build at a time?
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Post by august »

more uboats would have helped sealion greatly. the failure to subdue england was hitler's first great blunder.
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Post by von_noobie »

while yes more u boats coud help how do they get tanks over there,

you would really have to work out how much material would go into each production.

eg:100,000 tons a month for u-boats and 50,000 tons a month for Marinefahrprahm.

not that these figures are any were near what they should be.
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Post by august »

i found this info at axishistory.com, a good site! the germans had Submersible/Amphibious Tanks slated for use in sealion.

Three battalions were allocated to the 16th Army and one battalion to the 9th Army. As of 29 August 1940, the four battalions, lettered A-D, totaled 160 PzKpfw III (U) submersible tanks with 37mm guns, 8 PzKpfw III (U) submersible tanks with 50mm guns, 42 PzKpfw IV (U) submersible tanks with 75mm guns, and 52 PzKpfw II (Schwimm) amphibious tanks with 20mm guns. The battalions were organized into three companies of four platoons each. **

** The four panzer battalions (A, B, C, D) later formed Panzer Regiment 18 (I. & II. Abt.) and Panzer Regiment 28 (I. and II. Abt.) under the 1st Panzer Brigade, which was renamed 18th Panzer Brigade and transferred from the 1st Panzer Division to the 18th Panzer Division. Before the launch of Operation “Barbarossa” in June 1941, the Staff/Panzer Regiment 28 was disbanded while I./Panzer Regiment 28 became III./Panzer Regiment 6 (3rd Panzer Division) and II./Panzer Regiment 28 became III./Panzer Regiment 18 (18th Panzer Division).

Transport Fleet “B” (Dunkirk): Vizeadmiral Hermann von Fischel – transporting the first echelons of the 17th and 35th Infantry Divisions and the staff and corps troops, including Panzer Battalions B and D (less one company from the latter), of the XIII Army Corps.
Tow Formation 1 (Dunkirk): Vizeadmiral von Fischel (as well as being the transport fleet commander)
Tow Formation 2 (Ostend): Kapitän zur See Walter Hennecke
Convoy 1 (Ostend): Kapitän zur See Wagner
Convoy 2 (Rotterdam): Kapitän zur See Ernst Schirlitz

Transport Fleet “C” (Calais): Kapitän zur See Gustav Kleikamp – transporting the first echelons of the 1st Mountain Division and the 7th Infantry Division and the staff and corps troops, including Panzer Battalion A, of the VII Army Corps.
Convoy 3 (Antwerp): Kapitän zur See Wesemann

Transport Fleet “D” (Boulogne): Kapitän zur See Werner Lindenau – transporting the first echelons of the 26th and 34th Infantry Divisions and the staff and corps troops, including Panzer Battalion C, of the XXXVIII Army Corps.

Transport Fleet “E” (Le Havre): Kapitän zur See Ernst Scheurlen – transporting the first echelons of the 6th Mountain Division, the 8th and 28th Infantry Divisions and the staff and corps troops, including one company from Panzer Battalion D, of the VIII and X Army Corps.

Echelon 1a (Le Havre): Korvettenkapitän von Jagow (originally designated Convoy 4)

Echelon 1b (Le Havre): Kapitän zur See Ulrich Brocksien (originally designated Convoy 5)

*** Four convoys would be formed for the operation – Convoy I: the steamers Stettiner Greif, Dr. Heinrich Wiegand, and Pommern loading troops of the 69th Infantry Division at Bergen/offloading at Bekkervig, Norway; Convoy II: the steamers Steinburg, Bugsee, Ilse LM Russ, and Flottbeck loading troops of the 214th Infantry Division at Stavanger/offloading at Haugesund, Norway; Convoy III: the steamers Iller, Sabine, Howaldt, and Lumme loading troops of the 214th Infantry Division at Arendal/offloading at Kristiansand, Norway; Convoy IV: the liners Europa and Bremen simulating loading troops at Wesermünde and the liners Gneisenau and Potsdam loading troops at Hamburg/offloading at Cuxhaven.
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Post by august »

sorry, bit of a tech glitch. transport fleet "B" was based at dunkirk, fleet "C" at calais, fleet "D" at boulogne, and fleet "E" at le havre.
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Post by von_noobie »

thanks for the info,
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Post by august »

Mit Vergnugen!
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Post by Leandros »

august wrote:more uboats would have helped sealion greatly. the failure to subdue england was hitler's first great blunder.
Quite a few German subs were available for Sealion. Dønitz was set at using all his resources for the operation. As such, I believe his thinking was correct. If the operation had succeeded it wouldn't have mattered how many boats he lost, how many crews were delayed in training or new boats not readied for service.

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Re: ships needed for Sealion

Post by lwd »

According to http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=1145 the number was 27. Not what I would consider "quite a few". Had they deployed for SeaLion it's not at all clear how many would still have been operational by the time they were needed either.
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Re: ships needed for Sealion

Post by Leandros »

lwd wrote:According to http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=1145 the number was 27. Not what I would consider "quite a few". Had they deployed for SeaLion it's not at all clear how many would still have been operational by the time they were needed either.
I have seen that figure before and it would be interesting to know how they arrived at it.

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