Type VII U-boat

U-Boat Type 7 class (VII), most numerous German submarines of World War II with 705 boats.
History, development, service, specifications, statistics, pictures and 3D model.

Battlecruiser and U-boats
One of the German battlecruisers meets up with U-boats in the Atlantic.

German Type VII submarines

Type 7C, 7A, 7B, 7D (total of 705 U-boats Type VII)
Type: submarine.

History:

Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles Germany was not allowed to retain or build any submarines so that at the outbreak of war in 1939 the German U-boat fleet was comparatively modern, all the vessels having been built since 1935. Between 1919 and 1934 German submarine technicians had not been idle, and among those submarines built in various European shipyards to German design and with German technical assistance were Gür built in 1932 for the Turkish navy, and Vesikko built in 1933 for Finland.

Gür was 72.4 m (237 ft 6 in) long and displaced 750 tons (surfaced) and 960 tons (submerged), and was armed with six torpedo tubes (four bow and two stern) and one 4-in (102-mm) gun. Vesikko was a smaller boat of only 250 tons (surfaced) and 300 tons (submerged); it was 40.8 m (134 ft) long, and armed with three bow 53-cm (21-in) torpedo tubes and a small gun.
Thus, Gür provided a prototype for an ocean-going submarine, while Vesikko was the forerunner of the coastal submarines.

Type II

In order to get the building program under way as rapidly as possible to fulfil the need to have submarines at sea and to train future crews, it was the coastal submarines of Type II, as they were to be known, that were the first to be laid down. The first such boat for the German navy, called U-1, was launched in Kiel in June 1935, the remainder following shortly afterwards. The class II B and II C were similar, but were larger and carried additional fuel to increase their range. II D boats were introduced in 1940; they were still larger; and were fitted with saddle tanks to increase their range further. Although used for operations early in the war these boats were soon relegated to training duties, an essential part of the enormous expansion program that the U-Boat arm was to undertake.


 

Type I

Meanwhile, the Type I, of which only two boats were built, gave the German navy a capability of operations in the Atlantic. Basically the same design and performance as Gür, these two boats in turn were to become the prototype, with the UB48 Class of 1917, of a new series of ocean-going submarines, the Type VII U Boat. This type, with its several variants, was undoubtedly the mainstay of the German submarine fleet throughout the war. The variants retained many structural characteristics of the original Type VII but were designed either for better performance or for more specialized roles.

Type VIIA

The first U-boat VII A was U-27, launched in 1936, designed for operations in the Atlantic. It had good sea keeping qualities and easy handling both on the surface and submerged, and carried the best possible torpedo armament that could be fitted into a submarine of less than 65 m (213 ft) in length and only 626 tons surfaced displacement. Inevitably this was achieved at the expense of other factors, and habitability was spartan, to say the least. The U boats VII As are distinguished by their single external torpedo tube aft. U 30, a boat of this type, was responsible for sinking the liner Athenia early in the war.

Type VIIB

Guenther Priens U-47 from VII B is leaving for Scapa Flow
Guenther Priens U-47 from VII B is leaving for Scapa Flow. Six weeks after the start of the war Germany had its first heroes. Prien entered with his submarine the British naval base Scapa Flow and sunks the battleship Royal Oak.

U-45, the first U-boat VII B, was launched in April 1938. The type had increased size and displacement to accommodate higher-performance engines and more fuel. The stern torpedo tube was made internal with the hull. The U-47 commanded by Korvetten-­Kapitän Günther Prien entered Scapa Flow in 1939 and sank Royal Oak, and later was to sink many thousands of tons of Allied shipping in the Atlantic.

Type VIIC

The 7C U-boats (VII C), introduced in 1940, had a further increase in displacement and fuel capacity, more torpedo reloads, and a better AA armament. Contracts were placed for 688 submarines of this type, though later some of these were cancelled and others were destroyed by enemy action during construction.

U-960 of Type VIIC
U-960 of Type VIIC in Narvik on August 15, 1943.

Type VIIC-41

The VII C-41 class differed only in that it had a stronger hull to give a greater diving depth. Eight submarines of this type were to have been completed for the Italian navy, but they were taken into commission by the Germans themselves following the Italian surrender. U 573 was interned in Spain at Cartagena after being badly damaged by depth charges dropped from an RAF aircraft in 1942. The following year she was sold to Spain and renumbered G7. U 570 surrendered after being damaged by an RAF aircraft south of Iceland, and later was commissioned as HMS Graph.

Type VIIC-42

Orders for a second variant, the U-boats 7 C-42, were cancelled to allow production to concentrate on newer types. Had it entered service it would have had increased range and an even greater diving depth.


 

Type VIID

A mine laying variant, the U-boats VII D, was introduced in 1942. The six boats of this type had a 9.8-m (32 ft 2-in) section added into the hull aft of the conning tower to take five free­flooding mine chutes carrying a total of 15 moored mines similar to those carried by surface mine layers.

Supremacy 1914

Type VIIF

In the VII F this extra section was adapted to carry 25 torpedoes to replenish other submarines already on patrol. Four boats of this type were built, and they carried additional fuel to increase their range. In addition to the replenishment torpedoes for other boats they had their own establishment of torpedoes to carry out their own operations.

A total of 705 boats of all variants had entered service by the time of the surrender in 1945, and of these, 437 were lost in action. The U977 (VIIC) left Norway rather than surrender, and after a continuous submerged passage of 66 days reached Argentina on August 17, 1945, where her crew were interned.

Type XIV

The U-boats XIV were tanker U-Boats derived from the VIIC class. They were used to supplying fuel to ether submarines to increase their time on patrol, and for this purpose they carried an additional 203 tons of fuel. They had no torpedo tubes of their own though they carried four torpedoes for transfer to other boats.


 

Users: Germany, Spain, Japan.


Museum U-boat U-995 (VIIC)

U-995
U-995 of Type VIIC, today a museum submarine.

Launched: July 22, 1943 (Hamburg); commissioned September 16, 1943
History: On VE-day (May 8, 1945) surrendered to Great Britain. In 1952 handed over to Norwegian navy. In use as training submarine until 1962. Given back to Germany in 1965 and rebuild to the condition of May 1945. Since 1977 as museum u-boat in exhibition at Laboe (Germany).

Pictures from interior and outer of U-995:


Animated 3D model of U-boat VIIB


Specifications for German U-boats Type VII

Specifications:

Specification
VIIA
VIIB
VIIC
VIIC-41
Typ
Ocean-going submarines
Displacement (surfaced / submerged)
626/745 tons
753/857 tons
769/871 tons
769/871 tons
Length
213 ft (64.9 m)
219.5 ft (66.9 m)
221.5 ft (67.5 m)
221.5 ft (67.5 m)
Beam
19.4 ft( 5.9 m)
20.3 ft (6.2 m)
20.3 ft (6.2 m)
20.3 ft (6.2 m)
Draught
14.4 ft (4.4 m)
15.4 ft (4.7 m)
15.4 ft (4.7 m)
15.4 ft (4.7 m)
Engines
two diesel, one electric motor with 2 shafts
Power
2800 hp surfaced, 750 hp submerged
Fuel
67 tons
108 tons
114 tons
114 tons
Speed (surfaced / submerged)
17/8 kn
18/8 kn
17.75/7.5 kn
17.5/7.5 kn
Range
4,300 nm at 12 kn
6,500 nm at 12 kn
6,500 nm at 12 kn (8,850 nm at 10 kn)
Diving depth (max)
?
490 ft
590 ft
Quick diving
?
30 sec
25-30 sec
Crew
?
?
44

Armament:

Specification
VIIA
VIIB
VIIC
VIIC-41
Torpedo tubes
4 bow 21-in (53.3 cm) torpedo tubes, 1 stern 21-in torpedo tube
Torpedos
11
14
14
14
Secondary Armament
1 x 3.5-in (8.8 cm) gun
-
-
-
Anti-aircraft
1 x 2 cm (0.79-in)
1 x 3.7 cm (1.46-in); 2 x 2 cm (0.79-in)
1 x 3.7 cm (1.46-in); 2 x 2 cm (0.79-in)
1 x 3.7 cm (1.46-in); up to 3 x 2 cm (0.79-in)

Service statistics:

Class VII
figures
sub VIIA
U27-36
sub VIIB
U45-55; 73-76; 83-87; 99-102
sub VIIC
U69-72; 77-82; 88-98; 132-136; 201-212; 221-232; 235-458; 465-486; 551-683; 701-779; 821-836; 901-08; 921-930; 951-1058; 1063-1065
sub VIIC-41
U 1101-1220; 1271-1279; 1301-1308
total
705 subs
Launching (all)
June 1936 (U-27) - November 1944 (U-1308). VIIC from 1940.
Operational
1936-1945
Fate
437 sunk for different reasons, 165 scuttled at VE day, 103 surrendered


Development of the U-boat arm 1942-1945

German U-boat arm:

month
commission
in service
losses
losses total
Jan 1942
10
244
3
64
Feb 1942
18
257
2
67
Mar 1942
18
267
6
69
Apr 1942
17
282
3
75
May 1942
26
295
3
78
Jun 1942
20
315
3
81
Jul 1942
22
323
12
84
Aug 1942
21
344
11
95
Sep 1942
19
353
12
107
Oct 1942
26
356
16
119
Nov 1942
26
368
14
135
Dec 1942
22
391
3
149
Jan 1943
22
407
6
152
Feb 1943
22
407
22
158
Mar 1943
26
412
17
180
Apr 1943
26
421
17
197
May 1943
27
407
40
214
Jun 1943
26
415
19
254
Jul 1943
26
421
20
273
Aug 1943
19
425
24
293
Sep 1943
22
434
8
317
Oct 1943
26
430
28
325
Nov 1943
25
437
19
351
Dec 1943
31
456
7
370
Jan 1944
23
471
16
377
Feb 1944
18
475
19
393
Mar 1944
23
470
23
412
Apr 1944
19
474
19
435
May 1944
18
479
24
454
Jun 1944
12
471
26
473
Jul 1944
15
461
22
504
Aug 1944
15
435
41
526
Sep 1944
19
426
24
567
Oct 1944
16
433
12
591
Nov 1944
24
442
7
603
Dec 1944
26
452
14
610
Jan 1945
36
467
11
624
Feb 1945
24
478
25
635
Mar 1945
29
456
36
660
Apr 1945
9
435
60
696
May 1945
0
399
245
756


References and literature

Fighting Ships of the World (Antony Preston)
Kriegsschiffe von 1900 bis heute – Technik und Einsatz (Buch und Zeit Verlagsgesellschaft)
The Illustrated Directory of Warships from 1860 to the present day (David Miller)
Kriegsschiffe 1939-45 (Heyne-Bildpaperback)
Flotten des 2. Weltkrieges (Antony Preston)
Die Schlacht im Atlantik (Andrew Kershaw)
U-Boote seit 1919 (Antony Preston, John Batchelor)
U-Boote im Duell (Harald Bendert)
Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg (10 Bände, Zentrum für Militärgeschichte)
World War II – A Statistical Survey (John Ellis)
Chronology of World War II (Christopher Argyle)
Seemacht – eine Seekriegsgeschichte von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart (Elmar B. Potter, Admiral Chester W.Nimitz)

2 thoughts on “Type VII U-boat”

  1. I was reading about the u-boat VIIC class and stumbled across your excellent site. I was surprised that the crew was only 44 total.

    Glad the war ended in 45. By 47 Germany would have the A bomb, had aircraft that could fly the Atlantic and back, had subs that superceded the XXI class and way more

  2. BRAVO ZULU, ww2-weapons.com AWESOME WEBSITE, WITH SOME GREAT PHOTOS, GREAT WRITING, and ALL ETC.

    KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK; AND LET US KEEP W.W.II HISTORY, ALIVE!!!

    Yours Aye: Killick Vison…Brian CANUCK Murza, W.W.II Naval Researcher-Published Author, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.

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