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July 31, 1944. HMS Loch Killin detected U-333 at 1,200 yards. Standard procedure: pass over submarine, drop depth charges by estimate, lose ASDIC contact, hope for the best. Success rate: 1 in 60 attacks (1.7%). Instead, Loch Killin fired three projectiles simultaneously while maintaining ASDIC contact. They arced 275 yards ahead, formed a perfect triangle with the submarine at center, and detonated at exact depth. U-333 broke apart. Debris surfaced 90 seconds later. The weapon: Squid. The kill rate: 1 in 3 attacks (33%). That's 20× more lethal than depth charges—and U-boat commanders called it "inescapable." SUBSCRIBE for more British weapons innovation. THE STATISTICS: Squid: 1 kill per 3 attacks (33% success rate) Hedgehog: 1 kill per 6 attacks (17%) Depth charges: 1 kill per 60 attacks (1.7%) 20× more lethal than depth charges, 3× better than Hedgehog 17 confirmed U-boat kills (1943-1945) GERMAN RESPONSE: Interrogation reports (1945): "Survivors described the weapon effect as inescapable. They heard the projectiles entering the water ahead of their boat. They took evasion but couldn't outrun the pattern. The simultaneous detonation created pressure waves that crushed hulls or forced immediate surface." Script: "German submarine commanders recognized Squid as a threat they couldn't counter." WHY IT WORKED: Problem with depth charges: Had to pass over submarine, lost ASDIC contact during final approach, blind firing at moment accuracy mattered most. Submarine took evasion during 30-40 seconds of lost contact. Squid solution: Forward-firing (maintained ASDIC contact throughout) Automatic depth setting (eliminated human error, within 10 feet accuracy) Triangle pattern (40-yard spacing, 120-yard spread, inescapable geometry) Simultaneous detonation (all 3 at exact submarine depth) 275-yard range ahead (never lost contact) Result: U-boats couldn't escape. At max underwater speed (7 knots), submarines couldn't clear kill zone in 40 seconds between firing and detonation. The geometry was fatal. SPECS: 3-barreled mortar (12-inch diameter, 12-foot barrels) Projectiles: 390 pounds each (207 pounds Minol explosive) Range: 275 yards ahead Pattern: Triangular (40-yard spacing, 120-yard total spread) Detonation: Simultaneous at automatic depth Reload: 60 seconds COMBAT RECORD: July 31, 1944: U-333 destroyed (HMS Loch Killin, first production kill) August 6, 1944: U-736 (HMS Loch Killin) April 1945: U-325 destroyed 17 total confirmed submarine kills "Most effective anti submarine weapon deployed by any navy in World War Two" COMPARISON: Squid: 33% kill rate, maintained ASDIC contact, automatic depth, 17 kills Hedgehog: 17% kill rate, contact fuses only, no explosion = uncertain result Depth charges: 1.7% kill rate, lost contact, blind firing, human error British chose effectiveness. Americans evaluated Squid, chose not to adopt (production reasons). Germans had no equivalent. TECHNICAL INNOVATION: Three critical advantages: Maintained ASDIC contact - eliminated blind firing problem Automatic depth setting - removed human error in depth estimation Triangular kill pattern - simultaneous detonation created inescapable zone 🔔 Subscribe for more untold WW2 stories: / @TheUntoldWWII 👍 Like this video if you learned something new 💬 Comment below: What other WW2 tactics should we cover? #worldwar2 #ww2history #ww2 #wwii #Since1940s #theuntoldwwii ⚠️ Disclaimer: This is entertainment storytelling based on WW2 events from internet sources. While we aim for engaging narratives, some details may be inaccurate. This is not an academic source. For verified history, consult professional historians and archives. Watch responsibly.