Patrol info for U-608
Departure | Arrival / Fate | Duration | ||
20 Aug 1942 | Kiel | 24 Sep 1942 | St. Nazaire | 36 days |
Commander | Officers * | |
Oblt. Rolf Struckmeier |
1WO Ltn. Karl-Ernst Kaiser |
2WO Ltn. Rudolf Schultze |
Daily positions, sinkings and allied attacks during the patrol of U-608
We have 35 daily positions for the 36 days U-608 was at sea.
Departure from Kiel on 20 Aug 1942.
21 Aug 1942 - 22 Aug 1942 - 23 Aug 1942 - 24 Aug 1942 - 25 Aug 1942 - 26 Aug 1942 - 27 Aug 1942 - 28 Aug 1942 - 29 Aug 1942 - 30 Aug 1942 - 31 Aug 1942 - 1 Sep 1942 - 2 Sep 1942 - 3 Sep 1942 - 4 Sep 1942 - 5 Sep 1942 - 6 Sep 1942 - 7 Sep 1942 - 8 Sep 1942 - 9 Sep 1942 - 10 Sep 1942 - 11 Sep 1942 - 12 Sep 1942 - 13 Sep 1942 - 14 Sep 1942 - 15 Sep 1942 - 16 Sep 1942 - 17 Sep 1942 - 18 Sep 1942 - 19 Sep 1942 - 20 Sep 1942 - 21 Sep 1942 - 22 Sep 1942 - 23 Sep 1942 -
Arrival at St. Nazaire on 24 Sep 1942.
Wolfpack operations during this patrol
U-608 operated with the following Wolfpacks during this patrol
Stier (29 Aug 1942 - 2 Sep 1942)
Vorwärts (2 Sep 1942 - 15 Sep 1942)
Ships hit by U-608 during this patrol
Date | U-boat | Commander | Name of ship | Tons | Nat. | Convoy | Map | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
12 Sep 1942 | U-608 | Rolf Struckmeier | Hektoria | 13,797 | br | ON-127 | A | ||
12 Sep 1942 | U-608 | Rolf Struckmeier | Empire Moonbeam | 6,849 | br | ON-127 | B | ||
20,646 | |||||||||
2 ships sunk (20,646 tons). Legend |
General Events during this patrol
We have no events listed for this patrol.
Add more events! If you know of an interesting event either missing from this date or an upcoming event that you'd like to share please contact us. We continuously update these databases.
Attacks on U-608 during this patrol
12 Sep 1942
An escort attacked the boat, forced it to break off its attack on convoy ON 127. (Sources: Blair, vol 2, page 31.)
About this data
If you believe we have missed an attack on a German U-boat in this listing please let us know.
See all patrols for U-608
* These are officers that later became commanders themselves.