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VLADIMIR
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Моцарт
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Дата
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05.02.2026 15:05:50
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Рубрики
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WWII; Флот;
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Re: "шел со...
>Это не шёл, а дрейфовал.
>Собственно вопрос не в способности торпеды преодолеть сеть, а сколько сети продержатся на скорости тихоходного конвоя 7-8 узлов круглосуточно в условия ласковой зимней Атлантики?..
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вот не совсем внятная инфа:
Torpedo nets were revived in the Second World War. In January 1940 the UK Admiralty had the ocean liner Arandora Star fitted out with steel booms at Avonmouth and then ordered her to Portsmouth where she spent three months testing nets of various mesh sizes in the English Channel. The net caught all the torpedoes fired at them and reduced the ship's speed by only 1 knot (1.9 km/h; 1.2 mph), but in March 1940 the nets were removed.[11] In July the unprotected Arandora Star was sunk by a torpedo, killing 805 people.
Booms and nets were fitted to a few ships in August 1941 and by the end of the Second World War they had been fitted to 700 ships. The nets did not protect the whole of a ship but protected from 60 to 75 per cent of each side. Twenty-one ships so equipped were subject to torpedo attacks while the nets were deployed. Fifteen ships survived as the nets protected them. The other six were sunk because a torpedo either penetrated a net or hit an unprotected part of a ship.
Не вполне понятно, сколько судов получили эти сети для дальних походов, но какое-то число было. В принципе, а чего мучиться и на каждое ставить, если они где-то в бухте/гавани? Достаточно вход загородить (в принципе).