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Continuing Germany in the Thiarian Universe:
5. A tradition of cheating: The Predator-class torpedo boats
Germany's first postwar building project were six small destroyers of the Type 23 / Raubvogel (Bird of Prey) class, based upon a slight downscale of the wartime H145 design to meet the 800ts size limit of the treaty of Versailles. As they carried the same armament as the H145s, they were overweight, and most performance data was unsatisfactory; they were no matches for the British V/W-class. Absurdly, Germany's naval construction department proposed to remedy their weakness by upgunning them from 105mm to 128mm guns without increasing their size, thus seriously endangering seaworthiness. In the end, the Germans decided to cheat, starting a long tradition that was to be followed ever more boldly right to the start of the second world war. The follow-on class Type 24 was designed to a displacement of 1.100 tons, enabling them to mount the proposed three 128mm guns plus an 88mm AA gun and eliminate most of their predecessor's weaknesses in terms of seakeeping, accomodation and range. Officially, their displacement was stated as 800 tons, and a ridiculously low draught was claimed (length and width, both visibly larger than their predecessors, were obvious to every observer, but draught was not). They were named for predatory land animals, thus they were called the Raubtier (Predator) class. Six units were constructed between 1925 and 1928, and they were rated as very satisfactory, being much more reliable and also more seaworthy than the first large Type 34 destroyers which supplanted them. A second batch of six boats was ordered in 1928, and they were completed till 1931. All received 37mm twins instead of single 88mm guns, the second batch upon completion, the first batch via retrofit between 1933 and 1934. Their names were Wolf, Iltis, Luchs, Tiger, Jaguar, Leopard, Löwe, Puma, Marder, Gepard, Panther and Hyäne. At the time of completion, they looked like this, painted in an experimental dark green livery which was however discarded again in 1932:
As the treaty of Versailles allowed only for 16 destroyers, the first two Raubvogel-class vessels Möwe and Greif were sold off to Iran in 1933. The four remaining units and the twelve Raubtier-class ships formed the backbone of Germany's destroyer fleet throughout the Thirties, together with 13 old 1911 type torpedo boats and three even older 1906 type units. They swapped their 500mm triple torpedo tubes with 533mm ones in 1933 through 1935 and received two 20mm guns each between 1935 and 1937. When the war started, the class looked like this:
All were active during the attack on Poland, where Tiger was lost in a collision with Z3. They then deployed to the west and took part in the invasion of Denmark and Norway, where the next loss occurred, again by collision with a friendly ship: Leopard broke in half after being rammed by an auxiliary minelayer. Luchs finally was torpedoed by HM Submarine Swordfish in July 1940. Successes were nil. Of the other nine, five managed to cross the English Channel in 1940 and deploy to Brest, together with the three surviving Raubvogel-class ships. From there, they frequently harassed British shipping, and after Scharnhorst and Gneisenau had reached Brest, they were the primary means of escort for the battleships. Puma and Panther each managed to sink a British submarine while escorting Gneisenau in the latter half of 1940. Panther and Jaguar sunk a British sloop and three smaller escorts in a pitched battle in the western Channel entrance in April 1941. At that time, they had received passive radar sets, looking like this:
Early in 1942, four units accompanied Scharnhorst, Gneisenau and Prinz Eugen halfway through the channel before returning to Brest. Of the other three, Wolf was mined off Dunkerque in January 1941; Gepard and Hyäne were part of the Baltic fleet during the attack on the Soviet Union and later joined the training flotilla in the Baltic. Iltis and Marder were lost in a night action with British MTBs in May 1942. The four Brest-based units had their greatest success in August 1943 when they raided a British coastal convoy. Puma and Jaguar sank the accompanying destroyers HMS Buxton and HMS Wells (Town class), and the German force of eight destroyers managed to sink five merchants. At that time, they had already active radar sets and replaced their aft rangefinder with an additional 20mm gun; they looked like this:
Löwe was lost in December 1943 in combat against British cruisers and destroyers; the claim went to HMS Loyal. Puma was sunk by British airplanes in Brest harbour in May 1944, and Jaguar and Panther went down during the heavy skirmishes that accompanied the allied invasion in Normandy in October. Jaguar lashed out for a last time and sunk the Norwegian destroyer Svenner before succumbing to gunfire from HNoMS Stord and three British destroyers. With two destroyers, a sloop, a corvette and two transports to her credit, Jaguar was not only the most successful boat of her class, but also the most successful German torpedo craft of them all. After the annihilation of the German forces at Brest, only Gepard and Hyäne were left, who remained in the Baltic and frequently escorted the old battleship Nassau on bombardment missions in 1945; they also aided in the evacuation of civilians from the Baltic and East Prussia. Despite repeated Soviet air, submarine and MTB attacks, both survived the war and were ceded to the Soviet Union in 1946; at the time the war ended, they had replaced their semi-automatic 37mm guns with fully automatic ones, and their 20mm singles with twin mounts. They also had their active radar augmented and their passive radar upgraded. They looked like this:
After a short service period under the new names Izkuzniy and Izpolitel'niy, they were scrapped in the early 1950s.
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GD