L-6: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 20:05, 8 February 2024
Photo NH 51134, courtesy of the NHHC.
Note that there is very little angle on the boat. Being a Lake design, these boats had midships diving planes and were intended to dive at a zero-angle, which Simon Lake referred to as "even keel diving". By the sixth photo she has come to a stop and is surfacing. Stopping then surfacing was a somewhat unusual procedure. Normally the boats would have made a running surface maneuver.
Photos courtesy of Mike Dilley, son of Homer "Pat" Dilley, WW I sub vet.
In this seventh photo the L-6 has fully surfaced. Men are on the bridge and water is draining from the superstructure and from the round open scuppers for her watertight superstructure as she moves through the long gentle swells. The slightly humped bow and these round scuppers/flood valves identify this as a Lake design submarine.
Photo courtesy of Mike Dilley, son of Homer "Pat" Dilley, WW I sub vet.
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