THE SUN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1918. Submarine, Hard to Make, Easy to Break By A. M. JUNCMANN, Associate Editor of the "Popular Science Monthly." EVEK since the first torpedo launched by a submarine sent its victims to a watery grave inventors have busied themselves with means of combating this Eca menace. In order to understand the problems which beset the inventors of anti-submarine devices one must know something if the construction of the submarine and its method of attack. Submarines arc built with two hulls. The inner hull is intended to withstand the water pressure when submerged and is stronger than the outer. The two hulls are connected by stout braces so that the outer hull and the braces arc a protection against the tremendous pres sure the submarine lias to stand when beneath the surface. Oil Carried in Hull. The space between the hulls is divided into compartments which are used for carrying oil for fuel and other compart ments which arc used for the water bal last the submarine must take on in order to submerge. When the submarine is ready to dive, water is admitted to these, compartments; when the vessel rises to the surface the water is forced out of the compartments. In attacking a submarine it is neces sary to do more than damage the outer hull. The patches of oil which are fre quently seen floating on the water after a submarine lias been attacked arc not by any means a sure indication that the Kaiser's sea monster has been sent to the bottom. In order to destroy a submarine by shell fire both hulls must be pierced. Rut the German submarine has its Achilles heel in the horizontal rudders which it carries both forward and aft. Once either of these two pairs of rudders is damaged the submarine cannot main tain its chosen depth. It must cither sink to the bottom and if in water more than 200 feet deep such a sinking would be fatal or it must rise to the surface and subject itself to the enemy fire. Storage Batteries a Danger. A very great source of danger to a sub marine which is attacked by bombs or shells is the storage batteries necessary foi supplying the electric power by which it must travel when submerged. It is quite possible that a shock caused by a heavy explosion may destroy the storage batteries and release aa acid which will eat its way through the metal of the hull. The moment this acid comes into con tact with the sea water a deadly gas is foiined and the crew must die the same horrible death that Germany has been inflicting on her enemies by using poison gas on the battlefields. Other weak iots on submarines are the periscopes, conning towers and screws. Curiouhly enough the U-boat can be most successfully hunted from the skies. Jf the weather is clear and the sea is calm ar aviator will be able to detect a peri scope from a height of several hundred ft-et much more easily than it could be seen from a position near the surface. Periscopes are so small and nowadays so well camouflaged that it is difficult to de tect them from a boat. But to the eyes of an aviator they stand out prominently against the sea water. What the "Blimps" Do. The airman is assisted in his search for concealed U-boats by special optical in struments which not only increase his range of vision, just as your vision would be aided by looking through a pair of binoculars, but are adapted to aid in see ing beneath the water. Where the water is unusually clear an airman flying at an altitude of from 1,000 to 2,000 feet can detect a submarine which is submerged to a depth of 100 feet. This, it must be borne in mind, is only possible under the most favorable conditions. If the water is rough or not clear or if the weather is unfavorable it is quite impos sible to detect the submarine. One of the reasons why it is possible for a seaplane to bomb a submarine is that it ran approach its prey without making its presence known by the noise of its engine. This is possible because the lapping of the waves and the sound of the wind drown the noise of the seaplane's engine. The ''blimps" of the British have been ciy successful in hunting submarines. They are a cross between an airplane and a dirigible. They have an airplane body and power plant and arc b'ke the dirigible inasmuch as they carry a gas bag. This dirigible feature-WjftleVfliem'lb11 One Set of Men Devote Energies to Devel oping Submersibles, Another to Destroy ing Them The Dangers of the Deep stop and investigate anything they sec which is suspicious. An ordinary airplane cannot do this; it miist always fly at a high rate of speed. The blimps are equipped with bombing devices and wire less. They make excellent coast patrols. There have been literally thousands and thousands of plans for combating the U-boat. Many of these inventions have been misgaided efforts of well meaning but ignorant persons. That is to say, persons who are ignorant of ordinary mechanical principles. For example, take the innumerable de vices which employ electro magnets and magnetism as the basis of a plan for anni hilating the submarine. Many men seem to think that if ships equipped with mag nets arc sent out they can draw a sub marine fmm its course just as the small tanee of from twenty to thirty feet away from the side of the vessel. If a ship is lying in a harbor it is an easy matter to protect her with such a net. Hut if she is steaming through a heavy sea, the tremendous weight of the water dashing against the nets would de stroy them. Even under ideal conditions dragging heavy nets would cut down the speed of any vessel to about five or six knots. Another system somewhat similar to the use of nets is that of towing steel plates on each side of the vessel. It is said that none of these suggestions has been ap proval by the Navy D partmcnt. One of the surest protections against the deadly torpedo is to divide the hull of a vessel into many compartments. The hull is divided into a great many Vs r- U.S. SUBMARINE STEAMING SURFACE SPEED. aV FULL. boy picks up a needle with the pocket magnet. Perhaps the reason this impres sion is so general is that magnets have been successfully used in manufacturing plants for lifting masses of iron or steel. They forget that the magnet must be placed in contact with the mass of metal before it can lift it It is absurd to suppose that a magnet can deflect a torpedo which weighs be tween two and three thousand pounds and is tearing through the water at a rate of some forty miles an hour. Many inventors seem to think that it is possible to send forth a sort of electro cuting current through the water. Others have planned means of shooting forth electric bombs, and innumerable inven tors believe that it is possible to electrify the water or the atmosphere in such a way that submarines would be destroyed. Such ideas arc utterly impracticable. But electricity in combating the subma rine is invaluable for sending signals and messages. Clever inventors are con stantly -working along these lines, and each day conceive an improvement in the use- of electricity for this purpose. Ever so many devices have been sug gested which are intended to protect cargo carrying ships by means of nets or screens. These generally arc very unsat isfactory. In order to be of protection ?lo the'-Ship' tnef-'nnW-T'neld'at acHs- compartmenls. If a torpdo manages to puncture one of these compartments those adjoining it are immediately filled with compressed air, so that the water pressure is equalized and no more can enter. An advantage possessed by the Wotherspoon system is that it necessitates very little change in the design of the vessel. Bat tleships have always been built with hulls divided into many compartments in order to protect them from taking in too much water in case of a collision. As compressed air is used on battleships to run the refrigerating machines, to fire and charge the torpedoes and to remove the hot gases from the gun barrels after firing, the installation of the Wotherspoon method was a very simple thing. All that had to be done was to connect the com pressed air supply with the compart ment pipes. It was not necessary to change the design of tbe inner hull. One interesting solution of the sub marine problem consists of a scries of buoys which are large enough to accom modate four men and afford-ihem living quarters for days at a time. The buoys have a three inch rapid fire gun mounted on the upper deck". Beneath the gun deck are the living quarters for the crew and below that is a tank which can be filled with water ballast when the buoy is to be sunk. At the bottom is a eylindri 'eal ebmptcaxi'tSt'taiii. -' K iwin-i i The buoy is as large as an ordinary room, being abrat sixteen feet in diam eter. Each buoy has telephone connec tions with the land station, a microphone for detecting the approach of the sub marine by the hum of its engine and a complete wireless outfit. A gasolene en gine is used to fill Uie compressed air tank. The buoys are to be connected by nets. If a submarine strikes the net during the day a flag indicates the fact and at night an incandescent lamp gives warning of the enemy's presence. Duties of tbe Crew. The duties of the crew are divided. One man would always be on deck as a lookout; another would be detailed to the wireless apparatus; a third would be ready to perform any duty which might be necessary in an emergency, and the fourth man would be sleeping. In that way three of the four men are always on duty. Many interesting sound recording de vices have been designed with the inten tion of locating submarines or moving torpedoes. These electrical ears open up a big field to the inventor who has sufli cient scientific training to develop the subject. Water is a wonderful conductor of sound and for that reason sound re cording devices are particularly advanta geous in eluding the submarine and its torpedo. Devices which depend upon optical means for detecting submarines arc not likely to lie of ad great assistance as the sound recording devices. The exhaust air from its propelling engine causes a stream of hubbies to appear on the sur face of the water in tbe wake of a tor pedo. If the sea is very rough it is practically impossible to discover these bubbles. Before the bubbles are seen the tor pedo may have travelled anywhere from fifty to two li'.indr-l feet in the direction of its target. Therefore, it is a lively ship which can elude the turpi-do once it has started on its path. Fast Ships Immune. It is a curious fact that ships which can exceed fifteen knots have suffered very little from submarine attack. Slow vessels, on the other hand, have no ehancv when attacked by a submarine. In order to be able to evade the submarine, a ves sel must have a greater speed than thaf of the submarine when submerged. The newest (Jcrman submarines are said to have a submerged sjoel of about ten knots and a surface sjeed of seven teen knots per hour. Kccords show that the slow vessels, once they are singled out by the submarines for attack, are doomed. The number of slow vessels which havo e.scacd is mi small as to lie negligible. Smoke screens have been found very useful to vessels which have high speed ami an' capable of quick manu-uvering. When the vessel sights the periscope of a submarine, smoke boxen are got out and thrown overboard. The boxes are filled with a substance which whra burning gives forth a" very dense sniokr. The ves sel, hidden behind the smoke. screen, can change her position antl escape tbe tor-. !edo.' A Cheerful Sendoff! DOWN" in south Jersey they are wide awake. The hour hand of the Jersey clocks had not gone twice around the dial after 300 newly drafted men in a certain city had been called for physi cal examination when the postman brought to each of them an invitation to buy a cemetery lot. The invitation read as follows: "Which is the better time to consider a matter of this character? Now, when there is ample time for calm, deliberate selection, or later, perhaps, when there is a necessity 1 Experience lias proved the former the better course; there is a satisfaction in owning an unused plot and in knowing you have relieved others of a responsibility." There arc possibilities for the humorist in this, if any one feels like getting fun out of it. Probably it does not seem funny to the young men about to be taken from their work and their wonted ways of daily living to go into the trenches. The clerk of the county is going to investigate the manner in which the names got out, and it may not be funny then for the people who sent out these cheerful invitations. Somebody ought to investigate, while investigation is in order, the psychology 'of tbfeSenfr&ffiimf;' sssucL vtemsr-