Minenraumschiff 26 (MRS 26)

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Minenraumschiff 26
Mrs26.jpg
Tekniske data
Tonnasje3500 grt
Karriere
ByggetMoss (N)
Skjebnesenket av russiske fly
Dato forlis26. oktober 1944
Dykket
NivåNivå 1
Tilgjengelighetfra land
Dykkedybde0-14m
Posisjon70.801564 N, 27.751122 E
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Teknisk tegning

Historie [1]

Deutche Kriegsmarines Minenraumschiff 26 har en kort men voldsom og aktiv historie. Skipet ble bygget i Moss på samme tid som søsterskipet MRS 25, planlagt som lasteskip. Under produksjon blir planene endret til å ferdigstille et moderskip for minesveipere istedenfor. På grunn av mange forsinkelser under produksjonen, kommer skipet først i aktiv tjeneste så sent som i juli 1944 etter en kort treningsperiode i Tyskland. Tyskerne var på denne tiden hardt presset på alle fronter og deler av Finnmark var allerede tatt av russerne. Tyskerne trakk seg nå sørover ut av Finnmark, og hadde et stort behov for sjøtransport i dette området. MRS 26 blir nå satt inn i tjeneste med transport av tropper. MRS 26 er tungt utstyrt med luftvernkanoner, og må best anses som en flytende festning. Den 26. oktober angriper russerne skipet med fly mens det ligger i Smalfjorden, men MRS 26 skyter ned to fly uten å ta skade selv. Dagen etter angriper russerne på nytt skipet som nå har kommet seg til Hopseidet. Etter at de har trengt seg igjennom kraftig luftvernild, får russerne inn flere treffere på akterskipet. Skipet er nå sterkt skadet og kapteinen bestemmer seg for å sette skipet på land. Men lekkasjene viser seg å være for store og kort tid etter tipper skipet over og synker på grunt vann. Her blir MRS 26 liggende en kort stund før mannskapet setter skipet i brann så russerne ikke skal få mulighet til å benytte seg av skipet senere. Under det russiske flyangrepet omkommer tretti tyskere. Idag ligger vraket rett inntil hovedveien ved Hopseidet, og er lett tilgjengelig med bil. Vraket er temmelig rasert etter at militæret har fjernet ammunisjon rundt og på vraket, men restene hviler på en komfortabel dybde av null til fjorten meter. Sikten pleier å være god.

Posisjon i Google Maps er kun omtrentlig posisjon.

History provided by German Kriegsmarine Encyclopedia

After World War I, the German Navy was allowed ot keep 34 of the 130 Minesweepers build during the war. Most of 450 ships of the 1916 type were used for mine hunting, but some of them did perform as submarine tenders, training ships or escorts. Well known with their black color and coal fired steam engines, those vessels were replaced by modern ships in the mid 1930s. In the mid 1930s, the minesweeping flotillas of the Kriegsmarine consisted of old ships build in World War I. To replace this old ships, a class of modern minesweepers, the "Mboot35" was designed. The result was a very maneuverable and seaworthy ship exceeding the expectations. Heavily armed those ships were often called "Channel Destroyers" by the British during World War II. Despite the successful design, several factors prevented that a large number of ships were build during the war. The boats were very expensive and complicated to build, therefore a more simple design had to be developed (which later got the Minensuchboot 1940). The engines were difficult to maintain and needed specially skilled personal which was not available in the required numbers. Since the Mboot35 had oil fired boilers, they also suffered from the oil shortage in the later years of the war. A total of 69 ships were build in eight different shipyards, 34 were lost during the war. After the war, 17 were taken over by the US Navy, 5 by the Royal Navy and 13 by the Soviet Navy which all were used in the Black Sea until the 1960s. Five of the ships taken over by the USA were returned to Germany in 1956/57 and were used by the Bundesmarine. As a successor of the Minensuchboot 1935 the MBoot 40 showed some design similarities, but was of a different origin. Since the Minensuchboot 1935 was quite complicated and expensive to build a, the new class of ships was based on the last mine hunter design of World War I, the "MBoot 16". The result was a ship that was about 10% less capable than the Minensuchboot 1935, but only took half effort to build. Like its predecessors ,those boats were not used for mine hunting alone, but were also used for escort duties and other types of operations. With its coal fired boiler this ships could even be operated then the fuel supplies of the Kriegsmarine had reached a critical level. Of the 131 boats build - most of them in Dutch shipyards - 63 were lost during the war. 30 were taken over by the Soviets, 25 by the USA and 13 by the British. The ships used by the Soviet navy were used until the 1960, most of them in the Baltic Sea, five of the ships formerly took over by the USA were given to the new formed Bundesmarine in 1957. The last active ships in this class are four vessels of the Romanian navy that were still in service as corvettes in 1994 (Demokratia, Descatusaria, Desrobrea and Dreptatea). The MBoot 43 was the enlarged successor of the mine hunter type MBoot 40. To speed up the construction, those mine hunter were not build in the conventional way anymore, but by separate pre-fabricated sections which were only put together in the shipyard (like the Type XXI submarine). Although the primary objective for these vessels was mine hunting, they could also be equipped with depth charges and used as submarine hunters, some were also used as torpedo training ships and had two torpedo tubes installed. Like their predecessors, the MBoot 43 had coal fired steam engines, which made those vessels easier operational in the last years of the war. Over 160 ships of the MBoot 43 class were ordered from 1942 on, but only 17 were completed until the end of the war. All but one survived the war and were taken over by the allies, some of them serving until the late 1960s.

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