SMS V185

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SMS V 185.jpg
History
War Ensign of Germany 1903-1918.svgWar Ensign of Germany (1921-1933).svgWar ensign of Germany (1938-1945).svg Germany
Name
  • V185 until 22 February 1918
  • T185 from 22 February 1918 to 4 October 1932
  • Blitz from 4 October 1932 to 1945
Builder AG Vulcan, Stettin
Launched9 April 1910
Completed20 September 1910
FateCeded to Soviet Union 1946
NotesConverted to control ship for radio-controlled target ship, 1932
Naval Ensign of the Soviet Union (1950-1991).svgSoviet Union
NameVystrel
Acquired8 January 1946
FateUnknown
General characteristics
Class and type S138-class torpedo boat
Displacement650 t (640 long tons) design
Length73.9 m (242 ft 5 in) o/a
Beam7.9 m (25 ft 11 in)
Draught3.07 m (10 ft 1 in)
Installed power18,000 PS (18,000 shp; 13,000 kW)
Propulsion
Speed32 kn (37 mph; 59 km/h)
Complement84
Armament
  • 2× 8.8 cm guns
  • 4× 50 cm torpedo tubes

SMS V185 [lower-alpha 1] [lower-alpha 2] was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the AG Vulcan shipyard at Stettin in 1910, launching on 9 April that year.

Contents

V185 took part the First World War, serving in the North Sea and the Baltic, and was renamed T185 in February 1918. She continued in service following the end of the war, becoming a control boat for the target ship Hessen in 1932 when she was renamed Blitz. She was ceded to the Soviet Union in 1945 at the end of the Second World War and was renamed Vystrel.

Construction and design

The Imperial German Navy ordered 12 large torpedo boats (Große Torpedoboote) as part of the fiscal year 1909 shipbuilding programme, with two ships (G175 and G176) ordered from Germaniawerft, four (S176S179) from Schichau-Werke and the remaining six ships (V180V185) from AG Vulcan. [2]

Sister ship V182 German large torpedoboat SMS V182 underway before the First World War.jpg
Sister ship V182

V185 was 73.9 metres (242 ft 5 in) long overall and 73.6 metres (241 ft 6 in) between perpendiculars, with a beam of 7.9 metres (25 ft 11 in) and a draught of 3.07 metres (10 ft 1 in). The ship displaced 650 tonnes (640 long tons) design and 783 tonnes (771 long tons) deep load. [2] Three coal-fired and one oil-fired water-tube boiler fed steam at a pressure of 18.5 standard atmospheres (272 psi) to two sets of direct-drive steam turbines. The ship's machinery was rated at 18,000 PS (18,000 shp; 13,000 kW) giving a design speed of 32 knots (37 mph; 59 km/h), with members of the class reaching a speed of 33.3 knots (38.3 mph; 61.7 km/h) during sea trials. [3] 121 tons of coal and 76 tons of oil fuel were carried, giving an endurance of 2,360 nautical miles (2,720 mi; 4,370 km) at 12 knots (14 mph; 22 km/h), 1,250 nautical miles (1,440 mi; 2,320 km) at 17 knots (20 mph; 31 km/h) or 480 nautical miles (550 mi; 890 km) at 30 knots (35 mph; 56 km/h). [2]

The ship was armed with two 8.8 cm L/45 guns, [4] [lower-alpha 3] one on the forecastle and one aft. Four single 50 cm (19.7 in) torpedo tubes were fitted, with two on the ship's beam in the gap behind the ship's bridge and fore funnel, and two aft of the second funnel. [2] [5] The ship had a crew of 84 officers and men. [2]

V185 was laid down at AG Vulcan's Stettin shipyard as Yard number 300 and was launched on 9 April 1910 and completed on 20 September 1910. [6]

Modifications

The ship was modified with two 10.5 cm L/45 guns replacing the 8.8.cm guns in the 1920s, [4] [7] while her boilers were converted to oil firing in 1923–1934. [8] By 1928 the ship's forecastle had been extended further rearward. [4] [7]

Service

First World War

On 23 January 1915, a German force of battlecruisers and light cruisers, escorted by torpedo boats, and commanded by Admiral Franz von Hipper, made a sortie to attack British fishing boats on the Dogger Bank. [9] V185, part of the 15th Half-flotilla, formed part of the escort for Hipper's force. [10] [11] British Naval Intelligence was warned of the raid by radio messages decoded by Room 40, and sent out the Battlecruiser Force from Rosyth, commanded by Admiral Beatty aboard Lion and the Harwich Force of light cruisers and destroyers, to intercept the German force. [12] The British and German Forces met on the morning of 24 January in the Battle of Dogger Bank. On sighting the British, Hipper ordered his ships to head south-east to escape the British, who set off in pursuit. [13] The armoured cruiser Blücher was disabled by British shells and was sunk, but the rest of the German force escaped, with the German battlecruiser Seydlitz and the British battlecruiser Lion badly damaged. [14]

In May 1915, V185, as part of the 15th Half-flotilla of the 8th Torpedo Boat flotilla, was deployed to the Baltic Sea to reinforce the German naval forces in the Baltic, which were deployed to support the German Army's advance on Libau (now Liepāja), Latvia. [15] [16] The 8th Torpedo Boat flotilla, including V185 was again deployed to the Baltic in July 1915. [17] [18] V185 took part in a sortie to the north of Gotland on 10–11 July. [19] In August 1915 the Germans detached a large portion of the High Seas Fleet for operations in the Gulf of Riga in support of the advance of German troops. It was planned to enter the Gulf via the Irben Strait, defeating any Russian naval forces and mining the entrance to Moon Sound. [20] On 19 August, V185 took part in a clash with Russian ships during which the Russian gunboat Sivuch was sunk by the battleships Nassau and Posen, helping to rescue survivors from the sunken Russian ship. [21]

In October 1917, the Germans carried out Operation Albion, an amphibious assault to capture Ösel and Muhu islands off the coast of Estonia. [22] V185, still part of the 15th Half-flotilla of the 8th Torpedo Boat flotilla, took part in Operation Albion. [23] [24]

In 1918, V185 joined an escort flotilla, and was renamed T185 on 22 February 1918. [25] She remained a member of the 1st Half-flotilla of the 1st Escort Flotilla at the end of the war. [26] [lower-alpha 4]

Between the wars

After the end of the First World War, the scuttling of the German High Seas Fleet at Scapa Flow on 21 June 1919 and the Treaty of Versailles left Germany with a small navy of obsolete warships. [27] T185 was one of four destroyers which Germany was allowed to keep in reserve, (with guns mounted, but without stores or ammunition) alongside twelve active destroyers. [28] [lower-alpha 5] In 1932, T185 was converted to serve as a control vessel for the radio-target vessel (and former battleship) Zähringen and as a high speed tug, taking the name Blitz, which had been used for Zähringen's previous control ship (the former T141), on 4 October 1932. [25] [30] [31] Blitz continued as a radio-control ship for Zähringen and later Hessen through to the end of the Second World War. The ship was handed over to the Soviet Union on 8 January 1946, being renamed Vystrel, but her fate in Soviet hands is unknown. [31] [32]

Notes

  1. "SMS" stands for " Seiner Majestät Schiff " (transl.His Majesty's Ship)
  2. The "V" in V185 denoted the shipbuilder who constructed her, in this case AG Vulcan. [1]
  3. Both Conway's All The World's Fighting Ships [2] and Jane's Fighting Ships [5] claim L/30 guns were fitted.
  4. The 1st Escort Flotilla comprised three Half-flotillas, with a total of 36 torpedo boats operated. [26]
  5. Although treated as destroyers under the treaty, V185 and other similar ships were always referred to as torpedo boats by the Germans. [29]

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References

  1. Gardiner & Gray 1985, p. 164
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Gardiner & Gray 1985 , pp. 166–167
  3. Gröner, Jung & Maass 1983 , p. 46
  4. 1 2 3 Gröner, Jung & Maass 1983 , p. 47
  5. 1 2 Moore 1990, p. 118
  6. Gröner, Jung & Maass 1983 , pp. 46, 49
  7. 1 2 Dodson 2019 , pp. 140–141
  8. Fock 1989 , p. 82
  9. Massie 2007 , p. 377
  10. Groos 1923 , pp. 193, 214
  11. Fock 1989 , p. 351
  12. Massie 2007 , pp. 377–380
  13. Massie 2007 , p. 385
  14. Massie 2007 , p. 413
  15. Rollmann 1929 , pp. 73–74
  16. Halpern 1994 , pp. 191–192
  17. Halpern 1994 , pp. 195–196
  18. Rollmann 1929 , pp. 201–202
  19. Fock 1989 , p. 352
  20. Halpern 1994 , pp. 196–198
  21. Rollmann 1929 , pp. 272–273
  22. Halpern 1994 , pp. 213–215
  23. Fock 1989 , pp. 361–362
  24. von Gagern 1962 , pp. 414–418
  25. 1 2 Gröner, Jung & Maass 1983 , p. 49
  26. 1 2 Fock 1989 , p. 348
  27. Gardiner & Gray 1985 , p. 139
  28. Dodson 2019 , p. 138
  29. Gardiner & Chesneau 1980, p. 223
  30. Dodson 2019 , p. 141
  31. 1 2 Hildebrand, Röhr & Steinmetz 1983 , p. 63
  32. Dodson 2019 , pp. 143–144

Bibliography