History | |
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Nazi Germany | |
Name | U-64 |
Ordered | 16 July 1937 |
Builder | AG Weser, Bremen |
Yard number | 952 |
Laid down | 15 December 1938 |
Launched | 20 September 1939 |
Commissioned | 16 December 1939 |
Fate | Sunk in 13 April 1940 in Norway by a British aircraft; eight dead and 38 survivors[1] |
General characteristics [2] | |
Class and type | Type IXB submarine |
Displacement | |
Length |
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Beam |
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Height | 9.60 m (31 ft 6 in) |
Draught | 4.70 m (15 ft 5 in) |
Speed |
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Range |
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Armament |
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Service record[1][3] | |
Part of: |
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Identification codes: | M 00 412 |
Commanders: |
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Operations: |
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Victories: | None |
German submarine U-64 was a Type IXB[4] U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II. She was ordered by them in July 1937. Her keel was laid down by AG Weser in Bremen in December 1938. Following about nine months of construction, she was launched in September 1939 and formally commissioned into the Kriegsmarine in December.
U-64 had a very short career and sank no enemy vessels. Having left her home port of Wilhelmshaven for her first war patrol on 6 April 1940, she was intercepted by Allied aircraft seven days later off the coast of Norway during the invasion of that country and was sunk by a bomb from a Fairey Swordfish aircraft of HMS Warspite (03).[3][5] Of her crew of 46, eight men died and 38 escaped from the sinking submarine.[1]