The defining characteristic of the Type II was the small size, its surfaced displacement being between half and one third that of the
Type VII, and one third to one fourth of the
Type IX's (depending on the variants used for comparison). Known as the
Einbaum ("dugout canoe"), it had some advantages over larger boats, chiefly its ability to work in shallow water, dive quickly, and increased stealth due to the low
conning tower. However, it had a shallower maximum depth, short range, cramped living conditions, and carried fewer
torpedoes. The boat had a single hull, with no watertight compartments. There were three torpedo tubes, all forward, with space for two spare torpedoes inside the pressure hull. Although the boats technically had a deck gun, it was a 20mm weapon best used for defense against aircraft. Space inside was limited. The two spare torpedoes extended from just behind the torpedo tubes to just in front of the control room, and most of the 24-man crew lived in this forward area around the torpedoes, sharing 12 bunks. Four bunks were also provided aft of the engines for the engine room crew. Cooking and sanitary facilities were basic, and in this environment long patrols were very arduous. Most Type IIs only saw operational service during the early years of the war, thereafter remaining in training bases. Six were stripped down to their hulls, transported by river and truck to
Linz (on the Danube), and reassembled for use in the
Black Sea against the
Soviet Union. In contrast to other German submarine types, few Type IIs were lost. This reflects their use as training boats, although accidents accounted for several vessels. These boats were a first step towards re-armament, intended to provide Germany with experience in submarine construction and operation and lay the foundation for larger boats to build upon. Only one of these submarines survive; the prototype
CV-707, renamed
Vesikko by the
Finnish Navy which later bought it. On 3 February 2008,
The Telegraph reported that
U-20 had been discovered by
Selçuk Kolay (a Turkish
marine engineer) in of water off the coast of the Turkish city of
Zonguldak. According to the report, Kolay knows where
U-23 and
U-19 are, scuttled in deeper water near
U-20. ==Comparison of Finnish Crichton-Vulcan CV-707(U2A) to German Type II==