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March 1943. The North Atlantic. One PBY Catalina. Fifty feet of altitude. A German U-boat crew scrambling in disbelief. Flight Lieutenant Denys Burch-Reynard stared at the water rushing up to meet him. Command called this suicide—a guaranteed court-martial. Standard doctrine demanded attacks from 200 feet, giving U-boats crucial seconds to dive. But Burch-Reynard had done the math: the rules were wrong. What happened next rewrote the history of naval warfare. Ignoring orders, he pushed his lumbering aircraft into a screaming dive, leveling out just feet above the waves. He released his depth charges at point-blank range, risking his own crew to the blast. The result? Total devastation. Three U-boats sunk in one month. Five confirmed kills. Zero survivors. One Distinguished Flying Cross. This is the untold story of the pilot who turned his aircraft into a weapon against the rulebook, proving that sometimes the only way to win is to fly directly into the blast zone. Discover how a "suicidal" tactic became the key to winning the Battle of the Atlantic. Watch till the end—you won't believe the physics behind his survival.