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17 Απρ 2018 · Fine lot of three relics salvaged from the wreck of the German battleship TIRPITZ, sister to the infamous BISMARCK, sunk by Royal Air Force bombers off Norway in November 1944. Includes: section of rusted metal, approx. 4 1/2" long, taken from a valve handle aboard the wreck.
13 Οκτ 2008 · There is a product being made from parts of the Tirpitz. These products are not cheap. Expect a price of around $615.00. I am a dealer for this company and when I saw they had something made from this ship it caught my eye and I thought of this forum. The metal was removed by Norwegian divers.
TIRPITZ was a 44,755 ton German battleship commissioned in 1941 (sister ship to the Bismarck) was named after the creator of the German High Seas Fleet, Grand Admiral Alfred von TIRPITZ, and out of action for six months following an attack by Royal Navy midget submarines.
7 Ιουλ 2005 · The Tirpitz took many years to break up, i don't have the exact year they finished but it was in the 50's, there are some small pieces left on the shore, at the wreck site itself there's wreckage on the bottom and is unfortunately a popular dive site with no protection.
18 Απρ 2021 · I'm trying to find details on the origin of the steel fragment I included in the pictures attached ... it has all the markings of the museum in Tromso, and I heard (online search) that parts were being sold by either a salvage company and/or the museum at some point in the 1990s ... however when I reached out to the museum in Tromso they claim ...
21 Ιουλ 2023 · The two short articles discuss the extensive post war salvage operation on the Tirpitz by the Norwegian salvage company that purchased the wreck. Both articles were originally published as newspaper reports and then reprinted in the USA professional military reference magazine ‘Military Review’.
Decades after the Royal Air Force sank the German battleship Tirpitz in 1944, and a subsequent salvage operation removed the ship's high-quality steel and operational equipment, hundreds of cubic metres of non-salvaged items remain on the site, along with widespread environmental contamination of the seabed.