Below you will find a list of all 3D models created by Underwater 3D.
Abille
This wreck is one of the most popular deeper dive sites of Hel peninsula. Even though it sank almost 80 years ago, it's still mostly intact, and makes a huge impression down there in the green, murky waters of the Baltic Sea.
A retired Polish navy submarine chaser. It was sank on purpose in the 1970s as a training ground for military divers. Nowadays, it's a classic, shallow-water wreck.
Recently identified thanks to my 3D model, this wreck was a small World War 2 German ship armed with depth charges (still there) and a cannon. Lies near Hel.
Recently identified thanks to my 3D model. This unknown wreck known as "Śruba" turned out to be an old german steam icebreaker that sank during Operation Hannibal near Hel peninsula.
A German minesweeper. Very important wreck in Polish history - that ship was the only enemy ship sank by Polish Navy during the September Campaign of World War 2.
A well-known wreck of a WW2 German minesweeper (pol. trałowiec) Munin. Lies near Hel harbour. Very well preserved, with cannon on bow and wooden steer and telegraph in the superstructure.
A wreck worth millions! It's a mid-19th century sailship full of corked bottles with L. Roederer champagne, Selters mineral water, and boxes with ceramics.
This unidentified wreck makes an enormous impression due to the fact that it protrudes steeply from the bottom of the sea. There is a wooden steering wheel on top of the wheelhouse, and in the wheelhouse there is a compass column and another steering wheel.
This sailship's amazing feature is a 10-meter-tall mast that still stands upright. Covered in nets, it makes a great impression. The wreck is very well preserved, and there are interesting things to see on the deck.
This wreck was scanned on request from National Maritime Museum in Gdańsk in cooperation with Baltictech group. It's a deep (82 meters) and almost "virgin" sailship that carried grain in its hold.