R-12: Difference between revisions
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-12 at her berth at the finger piers at Submarine Base Pearl Harbor, early 1920's. The three horns visible on her forward deck above the folded bow planes are the transducers for the Y-tube passive sonar. | <div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-12 at her berth at the finger piers at Submarine Base Pearl Harbor, early 1920's. The three horns visible on her forward deck above the folded bow planes are the transducers for the Y-tube passive sonar. | ||
Latest revision as of 17:11, 22 September 2023
Notes
On June 12, 1943 R-12 was underway in the Florida Straits from her base in Key West. She was conducting a training mission with numerous Navy students and two Brazilian Navy observers onboard. At 1223 that afternoon she was running on the surface to a torpedo firing area when word was received on the bridge that the forward battery compartment was flooding. The collision alarm was sounded to alert the crew to the flooding. The disaster unfolded extremely fast. The boat nosed downward and was gone in just a few seconds. Only five men on the bridge made it off the boat before she went under. A subsequent Board of Inquiry was unable to ascertain the exact cause of her sinking, but it is likely that a failure of her riveted hull somewhere in the forward battery compartment was the cause of her loss.
In the fall of 2010 the wreck of the R-12 was discovered by a team lead by explorer Tim Taylor and his wife Christine Dennison. Using a Remotely Operated Vehicle, they returned in 2012, 2013, and 2014 and thoroughly documented the wreck site. While they were unable to find the exact cause of the sinking, their findings reinforced the idea of a hull failure.
For more information concerning the expeditions to the wreck site, please see this link to the Lost 52 Project page for the R-12, and this page for further information.
National Archives photo.
National Archives photo.
National Archives photo.
National Archives photo.
National Archives photo.
National Archives photo 80-G-7252 via Sean Hert and Navsource.org
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