Cornelis Jacobszoon Drebbel is a long forgotten engineering pioneer. He worked
amongst the ferment of new ideas and new technologies of early 17th Europe and like many clever men of the time
was a bit of a showman – you had to be to attract the necessary
funds from Princes and Kings – and touted his ideas around the
courts of Europe.
And
Cornelis travelling engineering show was pretty impressive; he
developed, among other things; a thermostat, a solar energy system,
special effects for masques such as rain, lightning and thunder,
worked on drainage and water supply in Germany and in England, made
an automatic lens grinding machine, a solar powered harpsichord,
invented the first microscope, made exploding glass 'Batavian Tears'
and designed a detonator that used them to set off torpedoes and
sea-mines, and then went on to create fulminate of Mercury.
But his
piece de resistance was the submarine...
Drebbel's Underwater Rowboat
In 1620 he
managed to interest King James I and VI of England and Scotland in a
radical new boat for his Royal Navy. Starting from the 1578 design by
William Bourne he created a leather covered, wooden framed boat that
could be rowed underwater. Over the next few years he created two
more, finally coming up with a veritable submarine galleon, a six
oared vessel that carried 16 passengers.
And this
was not just some Leonardo-ish doodling on plans that never came to
pass either, he built it and had it rowed for three hours 12 feet
under the water, up and down the Thames between Westminster and
Greenwich before an astonished King and thousands of his subjects.
But
unfortunately the Admiralty didn't like the idea and it never saw use
in combat.
Modern
engineers have suspected that Drebbel's device was in fact more hype
than substance, but a modern reconstruction (extrapolated from
descriptions and pictures admittedly) built of the BBC 'Building the
Impossible' series did actually work.
The Truth
Any, all
or none of the following explanations may be true...
- Drebbel
actually did it. The device works thanks to his talent for alchemy;
one diarist says he made a 'chymicall liquor' kept in a stoppered
flask which would 'speedily restore the troubled air'. This is
potassium nitrate, and by heating it Drebbel could create oxygen. The
records don't actually record this, but the boat was destroyed due to
this device – an able seaman lit a pipe when the boat had been
underwater for a couple of hours and Drebbel's oxygenator had
enriched the carbon dioxide laden atmosphere with plenty of fresh
oxygen. The boat caught fire 15 feet down, the crew were overcome by
smoke and died trying to escape.
LotFP Watercraft:
Submersible
Required Crew: 4, Miles per day: Sailing 12, Rowing 12, Cargo 0.5, Ship Hit Points: 3
The ship has a small mast and sail which can be raised when on the surface, not that it is very effective. Once it has taken 1 damage it will begin to flood and will sink to the bottom in 10+1d10 rounds unless it surfaces. If it takes 2 damage while underwater it cannot surface and will hit the bottom in 1d10 rounds. Escaping from the ship while underwater isn't easy. Highest DEX passenger goes first and makes a save vs Paralysis plus their Dex bonus to get out. Only one person may attempt to escape per round, and each round they are stuck in the flooding and sinking boat they get a penalty of -1 to the save. Once it has 'sunk' it is full of water and all aboard will drown.
Can sail for a maximum of three hours underwater, each hours submerged travel costing 5sp in chemicals for the air recycling rig.
Making such a boat will cost 3000sp, or £150, but can be done by an ordinary boatyard. - Drebbel's
boat was crap. It couldn't submerge totally, you needed to keep the
hatch of the 'conning tower' open so the crew could breathe and it
was appallingly easily swamped unless the water was completely calm. The ship still exists at the King's boathouse in Westminster, but it will need repairs.
- Drebbel
was a sorcerer. The boat did indeed work but only because the cunning
swine utilised a temporary magic portal to another world to refresh the
atmosphere inside the vessel. On one test the 'atmospheric portal'
did not open onto the refreshing sea breezes of Theta Reticuli VI, but
onto the soupy and miasmic lower clouds of a gas giant, killing all
in the boat. There is a pond in a secret location in Herefordshire
covered by a sealed dome where the still open portal pumps toxic oily
fumes into the water and years later pollutes the air above it. Natural
philosophers and engineers seek a way of closing it, but some
horrible floating betentacled things got in through the portal and
are making it difficult.
- Drebbel
was a pretty evil sorcerer. The boat worked because he had surgically
adapted the crew to underwater rowing by grafting gills onto them.
When the program ended the crew were left to fend for themselves and
currently live in a cave under Lake Windemere in Cumbria. One of
their number has ventured ashore though – he wants a woman to be
changed to be his companion and seeks to find Drebbel's arcane
surgical manuals and to woo – or even kidnap – a suitable
convert.
- Drebbel
was a pretty smart sorcerer. He didn't just invent a submersible boat
he invented an invisible one and told everyone it was a submersible
to throw off spies and rivals. and avoid having people inquire to
deeply into the quite diabolic magic he employed. The whole thing
operates thanks to an invisible amoeba-like demon that swallows the
boat, scoots it down river then vomits it up. Drebbel uses various
substances to coat the boat to avoid it being digested and electrical
discharges to get it out of the demon at the destination. Hopefully.
The demon is still about, Drebbel set it loose in the Cambridgeshire fens where it was supposed to help with the drainage project he had going there. It's gone a bit wild in the intervening years though, might not respond to well to the magic dog-whistle Drebbel made to call it. - Drebbel
got too ambitious. He found a way of miniaturising his submarine and
its crew and when King James fell ill in March 1625 sent them on a
mission into the King's brain to repair the damage caused by a
stroke. Sadly the miniaturisation magic wore off too quickly making
quite a mess. A waxwork of the King's head was fashioned for the
lying in state part of his funeral.
- Drebbel's boats were taken seriously by the Admiralty, but King James was too canny to let on, and development continued in secret. During the current civil war Parliament may be very pleased with themselves for subverting the entire Royal Navy, but just wait until the secret submersible squadron, powered by Drebbel's Perpetuum Mobile engine, are unleashed. They have already ferried Queen Henrietta Maria secretly across the channel and are bringing arms in from the Netherlands. Once the nefarious splintering glass torpedoes are perfected those treacherous and mutinous bastards in the surface fleet will be sent to the deeps!
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