Everything about I-400 Class Submarine totally explained
The
Sen Toku I-400-class (伊四〇〇型潜水艦)
submarines of the
Imperial Japanese Navy were the largest submarines of
World War II, and the largest ever built prior to the development of nuclear ballistic missile submarines in the 1960s. These were
submarine aircraft carriers and each of them was able to carry 3
Aichi M6A Seiran aircraft underwater to their destinations. They also carried
torpedoes for close range combat and were designed to surface, launch the planes then dive again quickly before they were discovered.
The
I-400 was originally designed so that it could travel round-trip to anywhere in the world, and it was specifically intended to destroy the U.S.-controlled
Panama Canal. A fleet of 18 boats was planned in 1942, and work on the first one was started in January 1943 at the
Kure, Hiroshima arsenal. Within a year the plan was scaled back to five, and only three (
I-400 at
Kure, and the
I-401 and
I-402 at
Sasebo) were completed.
Characteristics
Each submarine had four 3,000
horsepower (2.2
MW) engines and fuel enough to go around the world one-and-a-half times, more than enough to reach the United States from either direction. It displaced 6,500 tons and was over 400 feet (120
m) long, three times the size of the average contemporary submarine. It had a figure-eight hull shape for additional strength to handle the on-deck hangar for housing the three aircraft. In addition, it had four anti-aircraft guns and a large deck gun as well as eight torpedo tubes.
They were able to carry three
Aichi M6A Seiran aircraft, each carrying an 800 kilogram (1,764 lb) bomb 650 miles (1000 km) at 295 miles per hour (474 km/h). The existence of the Seiran was unknown to Allied intelligence. The wings of the Seiran folded back, the horizontal stabilizers folded down, and the top of the vertical stabilizer folded over so the overall forward profile of the aircraft was within the diameter of its propeller. When prepared for flight, they'd a wing span of 40 feet (12 m) and a length of 38 feet (11.6 m). A crew of four could prepare and get all three airborne in 45 minutes. The planes were launched from a 120-foot (37-m)
catapult on the deck of the giant submarine. A restored Seiran airplane is displayed at the
National Air and Space Museum in
Washington, D.C.. Only one was ever recovered and it had been ravaged by weather and souvenir collectors, but the restoration team was able to reconstruct it accurately.
Operational history
As the war turned against the Japanese and their fleet no longer had free rein in the Pacific, the Commander-in-Chief of the
Japanese Combined Fleet,
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, devised a daring plan to attack the cities of
New York, Washington D.C., and other large American cities as well as to destroy the
Panama Canal.
One of Yamamoto’s plans was to use the
sen toku (secret submarine attack), so that in the opening days of
1945, preparations were under way to attack the Panama Canal. The strategy was to cut the supply lines and access to the
Pacific Ocean by U.S. ships. The plan was to sail westward through the
Indian Ocean, around the southern tip of
Africa, and attack the canal’s
Gatun Locks from the east, a direction from which the Americans wouldn't expect and were little prepared to defend. The flights would, of course, be one-way trips. None of the pilots expected to survive the attack, a tactic called
tokko. Each pilot was presented with a
tokko short sword, symbolic of the ultimate sacrifice.
Before the attack could commence from the Japanese naval base at
Maizuru, word reached Japan that the Allies were preparing for an assault on the home islands. The mission was changed to attack the Allied naval base on
Ulithi where the invasion was being assembled. Before that could take place, the Emperor announced the surrender of Japan.
On
August 22,
1945, the crews of the submarines were ordered to destroy all their weapons. The torpedoes were fired without arming and the aircraft were launched without unfolding the wings and stabilizers. When
I-401 surrendered to an American destroyer, the U.S. crew was astounded at its size. The commander of the submarine fleet, Captain Ariizumi, apparently decided on suicide rather than surrender to the Americans. He requested that his body be wrapped in the Japanese flag and buried at sea and shot himself. His body was never presented as proof of his death.
American inspections
The U.S. Navy boarded and recovered 24 submarines including the three
I-400 submarines, taking them to
Sasebo Bay to study them. While there, they received a message that the
Soviets were sending an inspection team to examine the submarines. To keep the technology out of the hands of the Soviets,
Operation Road’s End was instituted. Most of the submarines were taken to a position designated as Point Deep Six, about 40 miles (60 km) west of
Nagasaki and off the island of
Gotō Islands, were packed with charges of C-2
explosive and destroyed. They are today at a depth of 200 meters.
Four remaining submarines (
I-400,
I-401,
I-201 and
I-203 which achieved speeds double those of American submarines), were sailed to Hawaii by U.S. Navy technicians for further inspection. Upon completion of the inspections, the submarines were scuttled in the waters off
Kalaeloa near
Oahu in
Hawaii by torpedoes from the American submarine
USS Cabezon on
May 31,
1946. The reason for the scuttling is apparently that Soviet scientists were again demanding access to the submarines. The wreckage of
I 401 was re-discovered by the
Pisces deep-sea submarines of the Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory in March 2005 at a depth of 820 meters.
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Post-War influences
It is sometimes suggested that the
sen toku inspired the building of the large modern
nuclear submarines and that the launching of aircraft from a submarine led to the idea of launching
ballistic missiles. This has been disputed because the largest submarines ever, the Russian
Typhoon-class, were built in ignorance of the
sen toku. As early as the Second World War, US submarines had fired rockets from deck-mounted launchers against the Japanese mainland (the Japanese thought they were bombs from high-flying night
bombers).
The hulls of modern nuclear submarines don't feature the figure-eight shape of the sen toku, but were based on the shape of the German Walther boats that were developed toward the end of the war. The Germans themselves based their design on the shape of dolphins. The Germans also experimented with rockets that were launched from
U-boats and devised plans for using
V-2 rockets against the United States.
(U-boat Rocket Program
)Further Information
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