German aircraft carrier

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She was definately sunk during the target practice - I have a very detailed account of how the exercise was executed, unfortunately, in russian only. I'm to lazy to translate it by myself, so try with an automatic translator :


"Ликвидацию АВ «Graf Zeppelin» (*) предполагалось провести с максимальным военно-научным и практическим эффектом. Для этой цели приказом Главнокомандующего ВМС адмирала И.С. Юмашева №0029 от 17 мая 1947 г. была создана специальная комиссия под председательством вице-адмирала Ю.Ф. Ралля, в задачу которой входило потопление АВ с проведением испытаний воздействия на него авиационных бомб, артснарядов и торпед в так называемом «статическом» (подрыв заранее размещенных боеприпасов) и «динамическом» (фактические стрельбы и бомбометание) вариантах (разработка и подготовка программы испытаний также поручалась этой комиссии; кроме АВ, участь «подопытных кроликов» ожидала «карманный линкор» «Lutzow» и 13 ПЛ). Предполагалось, что на АВ сначала будут подорваны заранее заложенные авиабомбы и артснаряды различных калибров, затем он будет подвергнут бомбометанию с самолетов, расстрелу из орудий главного калибра крейсеров и, наконец, завершат дело «лихие» торпедные атаки надводных кораблей. Планировался также и подрыв мин на различных глубинах и удалениях. В промежутках между вариантами указанного сценария группы военных ученых должны были производить замеры, расчеты и проверки элементов корабля с минимальными действиями по восстановлению его живучести (например, запуск насосов для откачки воды)."

[...]

После первой серии взрывов была проведена авиационная бомбардировка АВ самолетами. Для выполнения этой задачи выделялись 39 экипажей 12-го Гвардейского авиаполка 8-й минно-торпедной авиадивизии и 25 самолетов Пе-2 — все имевшиеся исправные самолеты полка. Экипажи более современных самолетов Ту-2 не назначались, так как в течение 1946 и 1947 гг. они имели незначительную тренировку (понятное дело: война закончилась, можно и слегка «расслабиться». Однако как это все же напоминает июнь 1941 г.! — прим. авт.). К моменту выполнения задания во всех ВВС 4-го ВМФ вместо потребного количества в 156 авиабомб П-50 имелось только сто. Поэтому с учетом выполнения условий бомбометания и наличия боезапаса в ударе по АВ смогли принять участие только 24 экипажа Пе-2. Две девятки самолетов бомбили по сигналу ведущего в звене, а часть Пе-2 атаковали цель индивидуально. Удары обеспечивали два самолета типа «Каталина», один из которых, находясь над целью, наводил на нее ударную группу, а второй работал в поисковоспасательном варианте. Кроме того — неслыханная на войне роскошь! — управление ударными группами осуществлялось еще и с «Волынца», а на палубе «жертвы» был нарисован белый крест 20 на 20 м с шириной полос пять м.

Первая атакующая группа нанесла удар с высоты 2070 м и сбросила 28 авиабомб, вторая — примерно с той же высоты, сбросив 36, и третья (индивидуальное бомбометание) «разгрузилась» 24 бомбами. Три самолета вынуждены были сбросить бомбы в море аварийно. Результат бомбометания по почти неподвижному, беззащитному и совсем не маленькому кораблю оказался «впечатляющим»: из ста бомб в цель попали только шесть (!), причем обнаружить в палубе удалось лишь пять попаданий. Летчики же настаивали на одиннадцати, считая, что часть бомб попала в уже разрушенные предыдущими подрывами места. Так или иначе, но бомбардировка АВ с точки зрения живучести ничего не дала: бомбы П-50 оказались слишком маломощными и не наносили существенных повреждений, кроме вмятин в палубе глубиной 5-10 см. Правда, одна из бомб сделала пробоину в буле ПрБ диаметром около 1 м. Для боевой подготовки «сталинских соколов» атаки «Цеппелина» слишком полигонными и, видимо, мало поучительными: противовоздушной обороны, понятно, не осуществлялось, самолет наведения беспрепятственно «разгуливал» над целью, высота бомбометания соответствовала зоне плотного зенитного огня. Летчики (судя по воинским званиям — молодежь, не нюхавшая пороху) жаловались на плохую видимость разрывов и падений бомб. Смеем заключить, что данное «мероприятие» можно назвать боевой подготовкой лишь с известной долей воображения.

[...]


Taken from the military historical magazine "Typhoon", 3/1997
 
Hi Stitch,

>Takeoffs and, in particular, landings were tricky at best, even for an experienced pilot; see the recent thread on the restored Bf 109 that crashed on landing.

I have to say that I tried to track down the Me 109's reportedly bad take-off and landing characteristics in contemporary accident statistics, and much to my surprise, I couldn't find anything to support the notion that it was unusally problematic.

What I did was to categorize all of JG 26 losses (covering the entire war) that lead to injuries or deaths of pilots, which are available in a list that gives the cause, and filter out landing and take-off-related accidents. I correlated that list with a list of the aircraft types flown by the units of the listed pilots at the time of the accident, and found that the Fw 190-equipped units had just as many accidents as the Me 109-equipped units.

I also had a look at the quartermaster records and compared the percentage of the aircraft that were lost to the percentage that were returned to the industry for repair and rebuild (for all Me 109 and Fw 190 since early 1942, when the records began), and the Me 109 and the Fw 190 figures for "returned for repair/rebuild" were within one percent of each other.

So it doesn't look like the take-off and landing disadvantages of the Me 109 had enough of an impact to increase the number of pilot injuries compared to that of the Fw 190, or the number of aircraft damaged so seriously that they couldn't be fixed at the operational units themselves.

So from a look at the atcual numbers, I tend to consider the reported take-off and landing issues of the Me 109 as a minor problem that had no measurable impact on its operational record.

I'd still like to conduct a deeper analysis of this topic, though - so any ideas of how we could cross-check the historical accident rate would be highly welcome!

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
Hi Ho Hun

I would be very interested to see the results of your analysis. I always thought that the undercarriage problem wa minor, but your post suggests that it was no problem. Do you think that is valid, when so many anecdotal appraisals say otherwise?
 

Here is a very rough translation (I can barely understand the translation!):

"it was intended to conduct with the maximum military science and practical effect. For this purpose by the order of the be commander-in-chiefing of Navy Admiral OF .. [Yumasheva] of №0029 dated May 17, 1947. was created special commission under the chairmanship of the Vice Admiral OF [YU].[F]. [Rallya], into task of which entered the sinking [AV] with conducting of the tests of the action on it of aerial bombs, artillery shells and torpedoes in the so-called "static" (undermining of the previously placed ammunition) and "the dynamic" (actual shootings and bombing) versions (development and preparation of test program also charged this commission; besides [AV], the lot "experimental rabbits" expected "pocket battleship" "Lutzow" even 13 [PL]).

It was assumed that on [AV] will be first blown up the previously placed aircraft bombs and the artillery shells of different calibers, then it it will be subjected to bombing from the aircraft, to shooting from the instruments of the main battery of cruisers and will finally complete the matter "dashing" torpedo attacks of surface ships. Was planned also the undermining of mines at different depths and removals. In the spaces between the versions of the scenario indicated the groups of military scientists had to carry out measurements, calculations and testing of the elements of ship with the minimum actions according to the restoration of its vitality (for example, the starting of pumps for the of pumps for the pumpage)."


Everything I have ever read about the GZ though states pretty much the same thing. She was scuttled by the Germans in 1945 but the Soviets raised her in 1946 and were going to tow her back to Russia in 1947.

In August 1947 the Russians used it for munitions tests to study the best way to sink a carrier. 24 bombs and shells were dropped on her and she did not sink and was eventually finished off by torpedos.

The last known pic of the GZ was taken on April 7, 1947 and her decks and hull were filled with crates and equipment that the Soviets had taken from the Germans to bring back to Russia for study as well as factory equipment.

Here is the pic:
 

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For those that are interested there is a book called Sea Eagles, The Messerschmitt Bf-109T by Francis L Marshall. Covers history of the Bf-109T. Why they where built and what units used them when the carrier was not finished.
 
For those that are interested there is a book called Sea Eagles, The Messerschmitt Bf-109T by Francis L Marshall. Covers history of the Bf-109T. Why they where built and what units used them when the carrier was not finished.

Great book! I own it and recommend it to anyone who is interested in this topic.
 
24 bombs and shells were dropped on her and she did not sink and was eventually finished off by torpedos.

I have no doubt that she was built very well but if she had a hanger deck stuffed with AV GAS, munitions and had hot boilers she would have sank a lot quicker.

I wonder if the water tight compartments were left open or if they were closed for an accurate simulation? Any ship the size of an aircraft carrier empty, with compartments sealed would be difficult to sink. You're just punching holes in the steel!

You know that some of that factory equipment plundered from the carrier has to survive! There's probably a machine shop in Odessa making cigarette lighters parts right now with the machinery!

it would make a great project to hunt down some of the parts.


.
 

Great posts Parsifal! Yes I would agree with you, perhaps the best plan would have been the "Sedlitz" cruiser project. Not to make a carrier Battle group, but as an escort for the "raiders".

Check out the earlier thread about CVL's

http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/po...at-type-would-you-have-raiding-cvl-11967.html
 

No arguements there. I was just stating how she was sunk.
 
Plans for a shipped-based air force started soon after Hitler became Chancellor in 1933. The first plans were limited to supplying the existing battleships and cruisers with reconnaissance seaplanes. On March 12th 1934 the first requirements the future aircraft carrier was given. Within a year the design study had been completed. The model used was the British Courageous class of carriers. On June 18th 1935 the signing of the British-German naval agreement set the future strength of the German Navy at 35% of the tonnage of the British fleet applied to all classes of ships. This opened the way for building the first German aircraft carrier. Based on British tonnage of the time, 38,500 tons, this allowed for two ships of 19,250 tons. Officials were sent to England to attend the Navy Week where HMS Furious was opened for visitors but little was learned. More successful was a German Commission allowed to visit the carrier Akagi in Japan where they were given 100 copies of the blueprints of the air deck facilities. However, the Japanese neglected to tell them that the carrier was about to be completely rebuilt and the plans were obsolete.

At the end of 1935, when the design of the carrier was mostly completed, it received the consent of the commander of the navy. On 16th November 1935 the order to build the 'A' carrier was given to the Deutsche Werke Kiel AG. At that time most of its resources were engaged in building other warships and its slipways were occupied by ships under construction. Therefore construction was delayed until 28th December 1936 when it was possible to lay the keel on Slipway 1, twenty days after Battleship 'E' – the Gneisenau – had been launched from the same slipway. The slipway construction stage took two years. The ship was launched by Countess Hella von Brandenstein-Zeppelin, daughter of Count Zeppelin, on 8th December 1938 in the presence of Adolf Hitler. Work progressed during 1939 and by August it was estimated that the first tests could be carried out in June 1940 and the ship ready for service by the end of that year. When war broke out the Graf Zeppelin was 85%-90% completed. The engines and boilers were in place, the auxiliary machinery prepared though not yet installed and the 15cm guns were in place as well but lacked armoured shields.

The order for carrier 'B' was placed on 16th November 1936 with the Friedrich Krupp-Germania shipyard. The laying of the keel could not have taken place until the second half of 1938, after the heavy cruiser 'J' had been launched, because only one slipway (VIII) could accommodate the carrier. The date, 30th September 1936, given in some sources is invalid and probably a misprint. 30th September 1938 seems the most likely date. The construction of the 'B' carrier was intentionally slow because of the possibility of using experience gained from trials of the Graf Zeppelin in the 'B' construction. The planned launching was 1st July 1940 which did not take place as the order was cancelled on 19th September 1939. The ship had been finished up to the armoured deck. On 28th February 1940 Admiral Raeder ordered the dismantling of the hull. The 'B' carrier was never given a name. Peter Strasser is ascribed to the carrier by some sources but is entirely speculative and it is questionable that Hitler would have approved it even if it were on the list of proposed names.

After the start of the war, works on the Graf Zeppelin continued as planned for a while, but soon delays were caused by the extensive U-Boat building programme. [Carriers were always last in construction priority. Until 19th September 1939 the priority was: battleships, submarines, destroyers, cruisers, aircraft carriers.] In October 1939 Hitler allowed only the building of small ships and the continuing construction of five large ships, the Graf Zeppelin among them. It was the German conquest of Denmark and Norway that had an adverse affect on the ship's fate. Defence of the long the Norwegian coast required many small ships and their construction became the priority. During a conference with Hitler on the 29th April 1940, Admiral Raeder proposed stopping all work on the carrier. Even if the ship was commissioned as planned at the end of that year, equipping her with guns would take another ten months, if not longer, and the installation of the fire control system several more months. (The original fire control system had been sold to the Soviet Union. In the end the AA and 15cm guns were removed and sent to Norway to be incorporated in the coastal defence system.) During a conference in July, Hitler referred to aircraft carriers saying that Germany must have "a cruiser with a flight deck". Ludicrous as it was to start a new project when the existing carrier was almost complete, it was Hitler's remarks that stopped all work on the Graf Zeppelin on the 12th July 1940 and the Design Bureau to prepare a design of an 'M' cruiser that could carry 14 aircraft. On the same day the Graf Zeppelin left Kiel for Gdynia (called Gotenhafen by the Germans). The ship remained there almost a year until Hitler's decision to attack the Soviet Union on 22nd June 1941. Because of the treat of Soviet air raids the Supreme Command of the Navy ordered Group North to tow the ship further west by 19th June. The carrier left at noon 19th June and reached Stettin on afternoon of 21st June. There she was moored at Hakenterasse, remaining until German forces had penetrated far enough to lift the threat of air attacks. On 10th November 1941 she left Stettin to arrive a week later back at Gdynia. She was then used as a floating warehouse for hardwood under the name Zugvogel.

By the end of 1941, the crippling of the Italian fleet in Taranto, the Home Fleet's interception of the Bismark and especially the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor had proved that ship-based aircraft were a fully developed and dangerous weapon. The Seekreigsleitung pressed for completion and putting into service of the Graf Zeppelin as soon as possible. The final discussion took place on 16th April 1942 at Hitler's Wolfschanze headquarters. The results were as follows:

1. Works on the hull and engines were to be completed by summer 1943.
2. The only available aircraft types, adapted Me 109 and Ju 87, required upgrading of the air facilities, especially installation of stronger catapults. Design, production and testing of these would take not less than two years so it was decided to modernize and adapt the existing catapults which would take six months. This gave the earliest possible time to complete the carrier as the winter of 1943/44. From the point of view of the Luftwaffe constructing a new carrier-based aircraft was impossible before 1946.
3. The Luftwaffe would provide the Kriegsmarine ten fighters and twenty-two bombers to be used in the reconnaissance role. Designing a torpedo-bomber was opposed by Hitler who thought such aircraft were not useful.

On May 13th 1942 the decision was made to resume the construction of the Graf Zeppelin. Along with changes to the air facilities there were other alterations considered necessary as early as 1938/39 because of the developments in naval technology. The superstructure was obsolete. The existing mast had to be replaced with a heavier one fitted with a fighter command post and radars. The bridge and fire control centre covered with fragment-proof armour. A higher funnel shield was necessary to protect the fighter command post from smoke. The alterations resulted in a significant increase in weight that needed to ne neutralised to keep the ship stable. Bulges were added to keep the ship upright. The secondary role was to protect the ship's interior from torpedoes. Parts of the bulges served as oil tanks. These additions improved the manoeuvrability and range of the ship. AA protection was also upgraded. The planned air component was composed of 28 Ju 87s and 12 Bf 109s.
 
Continued.

The Supreme Command of the Navy expected that work would be completed by April 1943 with the first sea test performed in August. However, the last twelve months of construction were to be carried out at the cost of cancelling VVIIC U-boats at Deutsche Werk AG Kiel. As well as the Graf Zeppelin, five other ships were to be converted to aircraft carriers. Due to the shortage of workers and lack of material, especially steel, Hitler decided to cancel the conversion of existing warships and put the workers and material into building the aircraft carriers Graf Zeppelin, Seydlitz and Potsdam. Meanwhile, due to increasing air threat, the operation to move the Graf Zeppelin to Kiel was delayed. She finally left Gdynia on 30th November 1942. On 3rd December the convoy reached Kieler Forde andf the Graf Zepplin anchored to the Heikendorf roadstead. On 5th December she was put into the Deutsche Werk floating dock where work on the bulges started immediately. At the same time work on the engines room was started to make the two inner shafts and their propulsion system operational allowing the ship to make a top speed of 25 to 26 knots. The objective was to finish the carrier in the autumn of 1943. On 30th January 1943 Hitler ordered all capital ships to be put out of service and cancel the construction of those not yet completed. Grand Admiral Raeder described it as "the cheapest sea victory England ever won" and was the direct reason for him being relieved from duty. On 2nd February 1943 the construction of the Graf Zeppelin, on which the bulges were still being installed, was stopped for good. On April 15th Deutsche Werk shipyard were ordered to prepare the ship to be moved to Gdynia. After these preparations the carrier was towed out on 20th April, its destination now Stetitin. There she was anchored on one of the forks of the Odra River and camouflaged to look like a small island. The initial plan of moving the ship to Pillau was abandoned because of a lack of adequate anchor ground. The end of the carrier came soon after the Red Army enterrd the territory of the Reich. First all the kingston valves were opened and the ship settled on the bottom. Then a ten-man squad prepared the ship for blowing up with depth charges. On the 25th April 1945 at 6pm the order was given. Thick smoke issued from the funnel, proof that the charges had gone off as planned.

In April 1945, Soviet troops found the carrier's artillery had been dismantled, the installation of fire control equipment had not been finished and the electrical installations partially installed as well as the flight equipment. There was a complete engine room and the power station was fully operational. Among the explosives, ten depth charges had been set of in the engine room. Water had penetrated through small blow-holes, cracks an leakages and the ship settled on the bottom in water seven meters deep. Seepage was so slow the water in the engine room was lower than that outside the hull. By 17th August 1945 the ship had been examined by teams of the 77th Emergency Rescue Unit. The carrier lay on the bottom with only half a degree of list to starboard. On the starboard were 36 holes up 1.0 X 1.0 meters made by shells and fragments. All the turbines, boilers and power plants had been blown up damaging the nearby watertight bulkheads. One .8 x .3 meter hole had been blown in the underwater part of the ship along with a .3 meter crack. The propellers had been dismantled and placed on the flight deck to minimize electrochemical corrosion of the hull. The aircraft elevators had been blown up as well. The ship was raised by simply sealing the underwater hole and crack and pumping out the water. Ten longitudinal and twelve transverse bulkheads had to be sealed to give the ship the necessary buoyancy. Cracks above the waterline and portholes were sealed with wielded metal sheets. Due to extensive damage and time pressures damage to ship's deck were not mended. After the repairs were completed the ship was towed to Świnoujście, the former Kriegsmarine base known as Swinemunde. On 19th August the hulk was included in the Soviet Navy as a spoil of war. At the Potsdam Conference (17th July until 2nd August) the first agreement was reached on how to dispose of captured German surface vessels. On 23rd January 1946 an Anglo-American-Soviet committee was formed to deal with these matters. All combat and auxiliary vessels were divided into three categories A,B or C. The Graf Zeppelin was given to the Soviets by lot and came under category C – ships sunk, damaged or unfinished that required over six months of repairs using the resources of German shipyards. It was the recommendation of the committee that category C ships should be scuttled in deep water or dismantled by a given date. Admiral Kuzniecov requested to repair the Graf Zeppelin for use as an experimental platform for the construction of Soviet aircraft carriers. Initially he was given approval for the Baltic shipyard in Leningrad to carry out the necessary repairs; however the authorities chose the simpler option of complying with the terms of the allied agreement. On March 17th 1947 a resolution was passed that all category C vessels were to be destroyed in 1947. The command of the Soviet Navy had managed to convince the government to run durability tests on the vessels.

From 2nd February 1947 the Graf Zeppelin was classified as experimental platform PB-101. The destruction was to be carried out in a manner that allowed the collection of experimental data and experiences. A special committee head by Vice-Admiral Rall was formed and ordered to sink the carrier while testing its resistance to aerial bombs, artillery shells, and torpedoes in teo variants, static and dynamic. Static meaning that the munitions would be placed in the ship and detonated and dynamic that they would be delivered by silulated attacks. The detonation of mines at various depths and distances from the ship was also considered. Between the tests teams of scientists would be sent aboard to assess the effects of the explosions. They were allowed to conduct minor repairs too stop the ship from sinking too soon.

At 2.45 pm on 14th August 1947 PB-101, as she was now known was pulled out onto the out roadstead of Świnoujście from where she was escorted by various vessels to the fivemile square designated as the test area. Due to draining of three starboard rooms in the bulges she had a 3 degree list to port. When she arrived o the evening 15/16th August if was found that she could not be anchored. One of the main anchor chain links failed and the light kedge anchor could not prevent the ship from drifting. This was to affect the final outcome of the testing.

The first tests were carried out on the morning of 16th August. First a FAB-1000 bomb was exploded in the funnel along with three FAB-100 bombs and two 180 mm shells set under the flight deck. For the second test a FAB-1000 bomb was detonated on the flight deck. For the third a FAB-250 was set off on the flight deck and two 180 mm shells on the upper hangar deck. For the forth a FAB-500 over the flight deck set on a 2.7 meter high tripod, a FAB-250 on the upper hangar deck, another on the flight deck and a FAB-100 on the C deck. The fifth and last of the series, a FAB-500 and FAB-100 detonated on the flight deck with part of the bombs set deep in holes cut in the deck to simulate penetration.

The funnel was ripped open down to the flight deck but the island was not damaged, with the shockwave failing to deform the smoke ducts. No increase in pressure in the boilers was reported and on the armoured gratings an intact spiders web was found. Of the three FAB-100 bombs detonated on the flight deck the most damaging was the one not set in the deck. The shockwaves of those set in deck were directed down into the hangar. The 180 mm shells caused various damage, the most effective being mixed armour piercing high explosive.
 
continued.

After the first series of tests an air raid was carried out on the ship by 39 aircraft from the 12th Guards Mine Torpedo Division and 25 Pe-2 dive bombers. On the day of the test there were only 100 P-50 exercise bombs available in the entire 4th Fleet instead of the 156 required. Therefore only 24 Pe-2 crews could perform the bombardment. Two nine plane flights droped their payloads on the their leader's signal, the rest individually. A white 20 x 20 meter cross had be painted on the flight deck with arms 5 meters wide. The first group dropped 28 bombs from a height of 2070 meters, the second 36 from about the same height and the third attack carried out individually another 24 bombs. Three aircraft were forced to emergency dump their ordnance. The affects of the attack on what was a 'sitting duck' were farcical. Of the 100 bombs dropped only six hit the target, and there were only five marks on the flight deck. (Soviet pilots claimed there were eleven hits, some of the bombs having struck already damaged areas.) The test failed to give any useful information. The P-50 bombs were too small causing 5-10 cm dents in the flight deck and blew a hole about one meter in diameter in the starboard bulge. The pilots complained about poor visibility.

Another series of static explosions followed. After the forth series the entire island was wiped out and the upper hanger seriously damaged. The effect of the fifth series was the most spectacular. A FAB-550 bomb on the flight deck blew a three meter hole and a FAB-100 bomb in the hanger demolished all the light walls and destroyed the equipment. That concluded the static tests and preparations for the testing of underwater munitions where begun. On 17th August the weather bean to worsen and the carrier started to drift towards the shoals. There was the possibility that the ship would drift into waters too shallow to sink her. Rall decided to abandon the testing and finish off the carrier with torpedoes. The pallned bombardment by cruisers had been cancelled because of an accident in one of the main turrets of the Molotov. The usage of the 180mm artillery was banned in the entire Soviet Navy for the year 1947. Three torpedo boats and the destroyers Slavny, Srogy, and Stroiny were summoned. The torpedo boats arrived first. The first run by TK-248 was unsuccessful, the torpedo passing under the carrier's keel. After 15 minutes a torpedo fired by TK-503 hit the starboard side near frame 130. The explosion destroyed the bulge but the armoured belt remained unscathed. After an hour the destroyers arrived and the Slavny hit again the starboard side near frame 180 where there was no bulge. The carrier began to list to the twice damaged starboard. After 15 minutes the list reached 25 degrees, and the ship started to trim to bow. After another eight minutes the Graf Zeppelin with a 90 degree list 25 degree trim to bow slipped below the surface. The date was 18th August 1947.

The results of the tests were kept secret and the allies only informed that she had been sunk. The gap between the summer of 1945 when she ws raised and March 1947 when her fate was decided remains a mystery. The German Admiral Ruge claimed in a book that the carrier capsized while being towed from Stettin to a Russian port due to the stowage of steel sheets on the flight deck According to gossip circulating in the Baltic Fleet published by Marek Twardowski in a magazine article, in 1946 the ship was towed to a Leningrad shipyard to be prepared for service. The authorities found this a welcome occasion for the transport of heay loot which was placed on the flight deck because the damaged elevators prevented the stowage in the hangers. Placing a heavy weight on the flight deck made the ship unstable and she capsized in the shallow fairway. Most of the goods from the flight deck fell in the water, whilst those stored below caused serious damage to the bulkheads and braces. Raising the ship was not difficult but she was no longer suitable for reconstruction and had to be sunk to cover the accident. This supports the account of Ruge but most probably untrue.
 
The 'B' carrier under construction. Never officially named but often called by some Peter Strasser.
 

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1.The launching ceremony of the Graf Zeppelin. 2.The Graf Zeppelin begins to move down the slipway.
 

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Summer 1941 Gdynia. Being used as a warehouse for hardwood.
 

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Graf Zeppelin Stettin probably middle of 1946. Still lying on the bottom. On the deck are the four propellers, removed to stop electrochemical corrosion of the hull. The poles are supports for camouflage netting.
 

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