ORIGINAL: mikemike
This is slightly OT. I own a monograph about the German Type XXI subs. Their intended standard attack tactic was shooting at depth (100-200 feet I think) on target data obtained by an active sonar. The author remarks that "passive sonars of the time would not have been able to locate an active sonar", that is, they might have heard an active sonar operating, but could not have pinpointed its bearing or distance. I assume this was tested at the time, but can anybody confirm that this would have been so and explain why? On modern terms I know that a sub using active sonar is in effect shouting, "I'm here, kill me!". So what was different in WWII? Incompatible frequencies?
My understanding is the Type XXI were indeed intended to use submerged attacks - combining sonar data and homing torpedoes - but I have the impression they hoped to use passive sonar. Active sonar is a great way to say "I am here" - and everyone for many miles is going to hear it - without even a hydrophone - you can hear it everywhere (except in the air I suppose). And with a passive set one could at least get the direction of the active sonar. It would sort of defeat the XXI concept. But XXI was not a good design - it was a technical mistake not understood as such until long after the war. It is not clear it was controllable at speed - and nobody ever dared find out. The hull shape was wrong - was substantially rationalized during the war - and the Japanese guppy's were based on "superior hydrodynamic research" - but we were so sure the Germans must be better we just sank the Japanese boats without testing. It is possible this rushed - and improvised - design was not entirely integrated in other respects. [Type XXI was not designed as such - she was a modified Walther boat when the Walther engines prooved too far out - and ultimately the Walther concept prooved unfeasible. Few were built anywhere - and those build were such fire hazzards they boats - RN and Soviet - tore out those plants in favor of conventional ones. But the point is - a XXI was a hull designd for another purpose with the lower hull filled with batteries instead of tanks for peroxide - and the whole thing was an improvisation - never really perfected - dangerous at designed speed.] For good technical discussion in considerable detail see US Submarines Since World War Two (USNI, Friedman I think) - also see references to British training submarines using Walther engines (Conways, Janes, etc) and anything on the early Soviet "Type XXI variant" - a three shaft boat with Walther engines on the center shaft - which was disclosed by "senior Soviet naval officer" - a defector.
While sonar was put on submarines in several nations, it was common - probably normal - for a submarine only to have passive hydrophones - not active sonar. Submariners are reluctant to ping - gives away they are there. Often surface ships are confused by lots of things - and are never sure if there is a real sub around or not. Pings would erase a lot of the uncertainty of ASW.


