Thetis (decoy)

A US government drawing of a Thetis decoy.

Thetis was the name of a floating radar decoy used by German U-boats during the Second World War.

The device was stored dismantled in the bow compartment as a pole about two metres long. Assembly usually took place in the U-boat's conning tower, and could be assembled in about four minutes (FuMT 2 - Thetis IIC). Later versions could be launched from a standard torpedo tube (FuMT 4 - Thetis US). When deployed, it was extended to a total length of eight metres, half of which was submerged. The upper half had a series of reflectors that were tuned to Allied anti-submarine radar wavelengths to give the same return signal as a U-boat. The number of Thetis decoys carried varied between different U-boats:

The first time the Allies knew about the "Thetis" was in a coded radio message to all U-boats transmitted on 11 January 1944. "Thetis" was introduced in January, when large numbers were released into the Bay of Biscay in July to simulate U-boat patrols during the Battle of Normandy.

See also

References

  1. "Report on the interrogation of survivors from U-66 sunk 6 May 1944". Navy Department Office Of The Chief Of Naval Operations, Washington. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  2. 1 2 "U.257, U.91, U.358 & U.744 - Interrogation of Survivors". Naval Intelligence Division. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  3. "Report on the interrogation of survivors from U-371 sunk 4 May 1944". Navy Department Office Of The Chief Of Naval Operations, Washington. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  4. "Report on the interrogation of survivors from U-575 sunk 13 May 1944". Navy Department Office Of The Chief Of Naval Operations, Washington. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
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