>The German Reich achieved something in 1944, which no other country in the history of humanity was ever able to. This sentence might sound weird, but the Germans developed the first true submarine. Everything that came before the "Elektroboot", the Type XXI, was not a true submarine anymore, after the Germans came up with this.>For the first time in history a nation developed a submarine, which was designed to be almost permanently underwater, fight underwater and achieve a speed of 5 knots there.>This breakthrough changed history. After the war every single nation, which prided itself with having a navy based their submarine designs on Type XXI. Even Sweden, a neutral country, discovered a wreck of the Elektroboot years after the war. They were like explorers, who discovered an ancient civilization with technology superior to ours and completely changed the way they thought about technology.
The magic of Rothschild money knows no physical bounds
>>18403358This is what we call "reclaiming honor". You see the rabbinics were enslaved, humiliated, and without a history. Up to that point they were ghetto dwellers, and they somehow managed to fall beneath the status of ghetto urchin. They didn't even put up a fight. There is no slave revolt for them- just years of humiliation until other countries, founded by Germanics, came to their rescue. And what everyone found was so pitiable they chose to forget for some time.
>>18403355Meanwhile the low tech solution to keep their normal Uboats operational: a fucking snorkel lol
>A post-war assessment of the Type XXI by the United States Navy concluded that while the design had some admirable features, it was seriously flawed. The engines were underpowered, which limited the surface speed and increased the time required to charge the batteries. The hydraulic system was unduly complex, and its main elements were located outside the pressure hull. This made the system highly vulnerable to corrosion and damage. The snorkel was also badly designed, and difficult to use in practice. The submarines had poor structural integrity due to the manufacturing problems. This rendered the submarines highly vulnerable to depth charges, and gave them a lesser maximum diving depth than earlier U-boat designs. Due to the combination of design and construction problems, journalist Clay Blair judged that "the XXI could not have made a big difference in the Battle of the Atlantic.[42]Not to mention it ignores the Italian Ictineo II and the russian Pochtov, neither of which were followed through on.