OK guys,
I apologise in advance for the length of this post.
According to Köhl and Niestlé in Vom Original, the main difference between the IXC and the IXC/40 is the fuel bunkerage (is that a word?) was increased by reducing the weight of the engines and other equipment, hence the quoted increase in range.
Rössler and Lehmanns Verlag in Geschichte des deutschen Ubootbaus quote similar differences in beam, i.e. 6.8m and 6.9m respectively.
Now to muddy the waters, hear me out on this as this is not meant to be an argumentative statement, more or a what if.
So lets start with facts there are many differences in type VII and type IX boats depending where they were built, flood hole and railing patterns to name 2.
Is it possible that the the different yards produced slightly different sized hulls?
Now lets add a bit of conjecture. Where do the dimension figures for IXC and C/40s come from, the build drawings or actual measurements, (if measured by axis or allied), either way there could be errors between them and the real boats.
Could the various books and websites be quoting from originally one source, which could be in error?
E.G. I have a set of figures that says IXC surface speed 18.3 kts IXC/40 19.0 kts, could these have been measured based on individual boats, if so could the C have had a deck gun. Also draft is quoted as being different between the two boat types, assuming minimum draft quoted, surely that would depend on the weight of the boat at the time and maximum buoyancy and maximum draft is irrelevant as they sink!
Generally the dimension figures for the VII C and VII C41 are identical for everything other than max depth, due to the improved steel used.
This would imply that a year suffix is an incremental improvement, possibly true of type IXCs (In this case fuel bunkerage and equipment weight)?
Just a thought on this as I type, it would be possible to measure the U 534s beam just aft of the tower, probably the widest point with a simply tape measure, wish I'd thought of that at Easter when I visited her. Ho hum I feel another road trip coming on.
Jon