Talk:Submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy

Latest comment: 11 years ago by HammerFilmFan in topic cost of the individual sub programs?

Department of Corrections

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Type 95 Torpedo

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The article previously stated that they Type 95 Torpedo was "the most advanced torpedo of the conflict." I edited it to say they were armed with the "advanced Type 95 Torpedo." "Most advanced" is very subjective, uncited, and very debatable. The Germans and Allies both developed torpedoes during the war that could track targets using sound and German ones used electric motors so they were difficult to spot. The Germans, Americans, and British all developed magnetic detonators before the war, although these did not work well at first. Type 95 torpedoes used contact detonators as far as I can tell.

Untitled

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A couple of points. I seriously doubt the I-400s had 4 diesels, each with 3000hp; more likely they had about 7000hp total, still more than any contemporary. Also, I've seen the "I-200 class" always called I-201. What's with that? Trekphiler 11:42, 12 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

After a readthrough, I deleted:
"the largest, longest ranged and most deadly torpedo in use at the time"
because Japan's own Type 91 destroyer torpedo was better
I corrected "four 3,000hp" to "1825hp [1] (1360kW)" and changed
"enough fuel to go around the world one-and-a-half times, more than enough to reach the United States from either direction"
to
"range 37500nm at 14 knots.[2]"
I deleted "of 4192 battery cells" as unsubsantiated & improbable. I corrected "5000HP motors" to "2500hp" & "double the horsepower" to "nearly double" & added "MAN" (again based on Fitzsimons). I'd also question they had schnorchels.
I also deleted
"Its name was combination of sei (clear sky) and ran (storm), literally “storm out of a clear sky,” because the Americans would not know they were coming. It had a wing span of 40 feet (12 m) and a length of 38 feet (11.6 m)."
as not on point. Trekphiler 04:14 & 04:45, 1 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Only 6 submarines?

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You wrote "only 6 submarines" tried to cross the ocean betwenn Japan and Europe but you mention only 5 of them. This is a little mistake. Moreover you forget several German and Italian submarines which reached the Japanese occupied area, for example the Italian submarines "Cappellini" (reached Singapur on July 14, 1943, "Giuliani" (reached Singapur on August 1, 1943), and "Torelli"(reached Singapur on August 31, 1943).


Wrong picture for the AM type

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The picture shows I-400 a Sen-Toku type submarine. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.137.120.127 (talk) 22:01, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Carrying the weight?

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I see mention of freighter subs, but no details. Did I miss something? I've seen them described as YU-1s (based on the Ha-101), design begun in 1943, built by Hasado Iron Works, Hitachi Shipbuilding, & Kudamatsu; 273 tons surfaced/370 tons submerged, 40.8x4.1x2.7m, crew 13, payload 40 tons freight. Just don't ask for a source... Trekphiler 11:19, 14 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I-64

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What was I-64? No mention of this boat on the page. Drutt (talk) 09:37, 14 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

Type 95 vs Type 93

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Don't want to trigger an edit war over this, since it's just not that crucial a point, but the Type 95 and Type 93 were siblings, both being oxygen-fueled weapons coming out of the same development program. Type 95 was for submarines and Type 93 was for destroyers, and, yes, it was the Type 93 that Samuel Eliot Morison dubbed the Long Lance. My point is that I think the best statement is that the Type 95 is closely related to type 93 -- not that the Type 95 was the Long Lance (it wasn't) or that it was confused with the Long Lance (doesn't seem to really capture the relationship correctly.) Thought I'd bring it up here before modifying the article, though. Yaush (talk) 15:26, 8 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

File:I400 2.jpg Nominated for Deletion

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cost of the individual sub programs?

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If anyone has access to that info, please add it to the article.HammerFilmFan (talk) 22:01, 6 January 2013 (UTC)Reply

  1. ^ Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. "I-400", Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Weapons and Warfare (London: Phoebux, 1978), Volume 13, p.1415.
  2. ^ ibid.