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Type J1 submarine

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I-1 in 1930
Class overview
OperatorsImperial Japanese Navy Ensign Imperial Japanese Navy
Succeeded byType J1M submarine
In service1926 - 1944
CompletedI-1, I-2, I-3, I-4
General characteristics
Displacement2135 tons (surfaced) 2,791 tons (submerged)
Length320 ft (98 m)
Beam30 ft (9.1 m)
Draught16.5 ft (5.0 m)
Propulsiontwin shaft MAN 10 cylinder

4 stroke diesels giving 6000 bhp

two electric motors of 2600 ehp
Speed18 knots (surface) 8 knots (submerged)
Range24,400 nm at 10 knots
Test depth80 m (260 feet)
Complement68 officers and men
Armament

The Type J1 submarine (巡潜1型潜水艦, Junsen ichi-gata sensuikan, "Cruiser submarine Type 1"), also called I-1-class submarine (伊一型潜水艦, I-ichi-gata sensuikan) were large cruiser submarines (Junsen type submarines) of the Imperial Japanese Navy.

Four boats were built between 1926 and 1929. These boats, based on the KD2 and U-139 designs, were of a junsen, or cruiser, type with an impressive range of 24,000 nm. Elderly by 1941 they were among the first Japanese submarines converted to supply duty.

  • I-1 was present during the attack on Pearl Harbor and witnessed the Doolittle raid on Tokyo, before patrolling the Aleutians. Her aft 14 cm gun was then removed to make room for a 46-foot (14 m) daihatsu cargo barge and she started shifting supplies in the Solomon Islands. On 29 January 1943, the New Zealand naval trawlers, Kiwi and Moa rammed and wrecked her in shallow water at Kamimbo Bay, Guadalcanal. Critical codes remained on board and the Japanese command tried unsuccessfully to destroy the boat with submarine and airplane attacks. The US Navy salvaged 200,000 pages of intelligence: code books, charts, manuals, and the ship's log.
  • I-2 was sunk by the destroyer USS Saufley off New Ireland on 7 April 1944.
  • I-3 was ambushed off Guadalcanal by PT-59 and PT-44 on 10 December 1942.
  • I-4 was torpedoed off New Ireland by USS Seadragon on 21 December 1942.

Notes

  1. Campbell, John Naval Weapons of World War Two ISBN 0-87021-459-4 p.191
  2. Submarine Type J-1

See also

Junsen type submarine
I-1-class (Type J1)
I-5-subclass (Type J1M)
I-6-class (Type J2)
I-7-class (Type J3)
Japanese naval ship classes of World War II
Imperial Japanese Navy
Aircraft carriers
Light aircraft carriers
Escort carriers
Battleships
Heavy cruisers
Armored cruisers
Light cruisers
Protected cruisers
Destroyers
1st class
Type Special
Type A
Type B
Type C
Type D
2nd class
Torpedo boats
Escort ships
(Kaibōkan)
Type A
Type B
Type CNumber 1
Type DNumber 2
Submarines
1st class
Kaidai Type
  • I-51 (KD1)
  • I-152 (KD2)
  • I-153 (KD3)
  • I-162 (KD4)
  • I-165 (KD5)
  • I-168 (KD6)
  • I-176 (KD7)
  • Junsen Type
    Junsen Type A
    Junsen Type B
    Junsen Type C
    Type D/Sen'yu
    2nd class
    Kaichū Type
  • Ro-11 (K1)
  • Ro-13 (K2)
  • Ro-16 (K3)
  • Ro-26 (K4)
  • Ro-29 (K5/Toku-Chū)
  • Ro-33 (K6)
  • Ro-35 (K7/Sen-Chū)
  • Type L
    Midget
  • Kō-hyōteki
  • Kairyū
  • Kaiten (suicide torpedo)
  • Submarine tenders
    Seaplane tenders
    Gunboats
    Ocean
    River
    Small craft
    Imperial Japanese Army
    Escort carriers
    Landing craft carriersShinshū Maru
    Type C
    M Type C
    Type A
    M Type A
    Type B
    Submarines
    Small craft
    S: Single ship in class C: Converted to ship type L: Officially classed as light cruisers until 1939 refits I: Incomplete until the end of the war X: Cancelled
    Japanese transcription: class/type (型, "Gata"), (re)model/mark (改, "Kai"), A (甲, "Kō"), B (乙, "Otsu"), C (丙, "Hei"), D (丁, "Tei")


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