French submarine Faraday


Faraday was one of 16 s built for the French Navy during the 1910s. The boat was based at Bizerte, French Tunisia, when the First World War began in August 1914.

Design and description

The Brumaire class was built as part of the French Navy's 1906 building program to a double-hull design by Maxime Laubeuf that were diesel-engined versions of the preceding. The boats displaced surfaced and submerged. She had an overall length of, a beam of, and a draft of. Her crew numbered 29 officers and crewmen.
For surface running, the Brumaires were powered by two diesel engines, each driving one propeller shaft. The engines were designed to produce a total of, but normally only produced, which was enough to give the boats a speed of. When submerged each shaft was driven by a electric motor. The maximum speed underwater was. They had a surface endurance of at and a submerged endurance of at.
The Brumaire class was armed with one torpedo tube in the bow and 6 external 450 mm torpedo launchers; all of which were positioned on the top of the hull. The two forward ones were fixed outwards at an angle of six degrees. The other launchers were single rotating Drzewiecki drop collars amidships. They could traverse 135 degrees to each side of the boat. One reload was provided for the bow tube. During World War I, Faraday received a deck gun.

Construction and career

Faraday was ordered on 29 October 1906 and was laid down on 21 July 1909 at the Arsenal de Rochefort. The boat was launched on 27 June 1911 and commissioned on 28 June 1912. She was assigned to the 2nd Submarine Squadron of the 1st Naval Army in August 1914.