Authors: John Geoghegan
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #History
Meanwhile work continued on the
I-400
subs.
L
ESS THAN A
month later, Nambu arrived at the Sixth Fleet Submarine Base in Sasebo. It was November 1, 1944, and a chilly wind blew off Mount Eboshi.
7
Sasebo was a Pacific-facing port located on Kyushu, Japan’s southernmost island. Nambu’s experience captaining mole operations would prove useful in commanding the
I-401
. Instead of transporting food to remote islands, he’d be carrying three special attack planes to bomb the Panama Canal. It was definitely a step up. Not every sub captain had the discipline necessary to hide from the enemy. Nambu might have thought it a pathetic skill, but he soon learned just how handy it could be.
As Nambu strode across the naval yard, sparks rained down in a hellish waterfall while the pounding of hammers assaulted his ears.
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When he finally saw the
I-401
, he was shocked—nothing had prepared him for her overwhelming size. The boat was so huge, you could easily stack one of his former subs on her deck.
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And that wasn’t all. The
I-401
was so secret that many of the guards didn’t know her true identity.
10
A World War II sub was a lot more complicated than it looked. It wasn’t just a single hollow tube with a conning tower on top—it was three separate components welded together. The largest component was the sub’s pressure hull, which contained her habitable spaces such as the engines and control room. Next came her ballast and fuel tanks, which wrapped around the outside of the hull. These were filled with seawater, air, or fuel depending on the need. The third element was the sub’s superstructure, which sat atop the pressure hull. On the
I-401
, the superstructure supported the sub’s teak decking and was semipermeable to allow water (or air) to flow underneath; that’s why, when a submarine
submerged, water could be seen spouting into the air. There was essentially nothing between a sub’s pressure hull and her deck except emptiness.
TOPSIDE
BRIDGE
The next thing Nambu would have noticed was the
I-401
’s sail, also called a fairwater, sitting atop her hull like a castle turret. It was offset from the sub’s centerline nearly seven feet to port,
*
11
to compensate for the weight of the aircraft hangar.
12
Wrapped around the top of the sail was the bridge, the preferred location for surface attacks. It was a spartan affair, open to the elements, that could be used only when the sub was above water. The bridge was like an oversize crow’s nest. It contained five 20X pressure-proof binoculars;
13
a repeater compass; a set of collision, dive, and battle station alarms; and a single Type 96
14
25mm antiaircraft gun mounted on her aft section.
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When the dive alarm sounded, as many as eight officers and lookouts had to clear the deck in under a minute. Jumping through the narrow bridge hatch, they slid 25 feet down a ladder,
16
like firemen down a pole. Less-experienced submariners burned their hands on the long slide down.
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At least there was a three-foot-thick canvas hassock to absorb their landing at the bottom.
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Occasionally a crewman lost his grip and plunged down the ladder, taking everyone with him.
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In that case not even a hassock could cushion their fall.
The sub’s two periscopes (attack and high angle) towered above the bridge, along with various radar and radio antennas. Additionally, there was a watch station on the air search radar column.
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The added height enabled a lookout to see farther than at deck level. This was important because a sub sat so low in the water, it couldn’t see the horizon 12 miles away. The
I-401
’s extraordinary
height made this less of a problem, every foot helped. Of course, most subs lurked at periscope depth waiting for a ship to pass. Nevertheless, lookouts were crucial when the sub was on the surface, especially for spotting aircraft or smoke from an enemy ship’s stack. The
I-401
may have had the latest surface and air radar, but no captain relied on it 100 percent. Sub lookouts were as important during World War II as they had been during the glory days of sail.
GUN DECK
Just beneath the bridge was the 100-foot-long gun deck. Sitting on the roof of the aircraft hangar, it was exaggeratingly described as a promenade worthy of the Queen Mary.
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Three waterproof triple-mount AA guns took up most of the area, one forward and two aft. Each gun required two men to operate and had its own ammunition scuttle. A pointer controlled windage from the left seat, while a trainer controlled elevation from the right.
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The target was framed in an open-ring gunsight, and the pointer fired the weapon by operating a foot pedal. Since each gun spat 220 rounds per minute and a single 25mm shell weighed five and a half pounds, they were a healthy defense against aircraft.
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Gun crews liked fighting it out on the surface: looking your enemy in the eye while doing something about it was preferable to waiting for the explosion of a torpedo. One problem with surface fighting, however, was that the motion of the sea made it difficult to fire accurately. Additionally, a single hit from an enemy shell could easily hole a conning tower, rendering a sub unable to submerge. Since a submarine’s true purpose is to destroy its enemies with a torpedo, most sub captains preferred a quick dive to a surface shoot-out, Hollywood movies not withstanding.
DECK
The most obvious feature on the
I-401
’s deck was the 102-foot-long aircraft hangar.
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Stretching over a quarter of the sub’s length, the hangar was only a few inches shy of 12 feet in diameter
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and was capped by a massive cone-shaped door. The hangar
was ribbed like a whale inside, and there were racks for spare parts, maintenance tools,
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and one set of
Seiran
pontoons. The hangar was so large, it presented a serious risk if flooded. A two-inch rubber gasket kept the door watertight, but there was always a chance the enemy might hole the hangar. In that case, the sub could release 220 tons of fuel to offset the lost buoyancy.
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Britain’s
M-2
had taught the Japanese well.
CATAPULT AND CRANE
The
I-401
’s catapult was custom built and, at 85 feet, 4 inches in length,
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longer than any catapult in the IJN. It was also the most powerful catapult the Japanese built during World War II.
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Using compressed air, it could launch a four-ton plane every four minutes at a speed of six knots.
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Catapult rails extended from inside the hangar and ran the length of the foredeck. As they approached the bow there was a three-degree incline to help give the airplane lift. There was also a collapsible crane located on the port side of the foredeck just in front of the hangar door.
†
When not in use, the crane lay flush with the deck.
ADDITIONAL DECK ARMAMENT
In addition to the bridge’s defensive armament, the
I-401
carried a Type 11 140mm gun on her after deck. The largest submarine gun in use, it was the same type as found on the battleship
Nagato
. Better described as a cannon than a deck gun, it was capable of firing an 84-pound projectile 16,400 yards at 2,789 feet per second.
31
After the
Seiran
and Type 95 torpedoes, the
I-401
’s deck gun was its most dangerous weapon.
HATCHES
Nambu’s sub had seven deck hatches, which granted access to important areas like the torpedo and engine rooms.
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Twenty-five inches in diameter, they were a comfortable fit for the Japanese.
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Each hatch, plus the sub’s two main induction valves and hangar door, was wired to a board in the control room that indicated whether they were open or shut. You never knew when the sub might need to dive in a hurry, so close attention was paid to this board to avoid accidental flooding. Occasionally, when the sub was cruising on the surface, a high wave swept over the main induction valve, causing a fluctuation in the boat’s internal pressure. When that happened, ears would pop and the engines would backfire, filling the sub with fumes. In addition to feeding the diesel engines with oxygen, the main induction provided battery and hull ventilation as well as some of the only fresh air the crew ever breathed. Everyone knew when the main induction was open because fresh oxygen (as good as sunshine) filled the boat.
STEALTH COATINGS
Being the largest sub in the world had its drawbacks. One of them was a huge radar signature. To compensate, the sub’s sail was indented at its base, to reflect radar waves back into the sea. In case this wasn’t enough, the
I-401
had two anechoic coatings on its hull, one above the waterline, the other below.
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According to Japanese navy personnel, the coating above the water absorbed radar waves, while the coating below the water was for “sound [echo ranging] protection.”
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Though the ability to fool sonar is questionable, there is some indication that the below-the-line coating helped dampen any sound emanating from the sub.
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This helped the sub avoid detection from anyone listening for her with a hydrophone. The coatings were black, lumpy, and easily abraded. They also reduced the
I-401
’s speed by a knot.
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If anyone questioned their efficacy, Nambu wasn’t one of them. Anything that increased his sub’s stealth factor was welcome, especially since the Panama Canal was so heavily guarded.
INTERIOR
It’s impossible to get lost aboard a submarine—all compartments are on the same horizontal axis, save the conning tower, and each compartment is sequential, one leading to the other. This means only a fool can’t find his way. But the
I-401
easily made fools out of newcomers.
The first thing Nambu would have found confusing is that instead of each compartment having only two hatches, one leading forward and the other aft, four of the sub’s eight compartments had an additional hatch in the hull, leading into what appeared to be a second sub running alongside.
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This gave the impression that the
I-401
was two subs welded together, with hatches connecting the starboard and port halves. There was an important reason for this twin hull configuration: it provided a more stable launch platform for three fully loaded attack planes. Still, two interconnected subs lying side by side would have disoriented Nambu, just as it would any submariner who was used to moving only forward or aft. Port or starboard had never been an option until now.
NO. 1 COMPARTMENT: TORPEDO ROOM
The
I-401
’s torpedo room was located in the bow compartment. Most submarines have only one forward torpedo room, while the
I-401
boasted two, one stacked on top of the other in a duplex arrangement. It was an unprecedented configuration for a World War II sub and immensely gratifying for any captain eager to sink ships.
A typical Balao-class sub carried six bow tubes, while the
I-401
had eight, four in the lower compartment and four in the upper.
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Though a Balao sub also had four tubes in her stern while the
I-401
had none, and carried 24 torpedoes to the
I-401
’s 20, no convoy or antisub patrol relished a sub that could launch eight of the war’s best torpedoes nearly all at once.
In truth, U.S. subs were at a disadvantage when it came to torpedoes though this would change as the war progressed. The Mark 14 was most accurate when fired from less than a mile away.
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As Japanese naval tactics improved, this became increasingly
difficult, forcing U.S. subs to launch from a greater distance. Japanese subs faced no such hindrance. Their Type 95 torpedoes had a range of five to seven miles.
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It was like bringing a lance to a knife fight.
Each of the
I-401
’s torpedo tubes had two sets of doors, an inner set for loading and an outer set for exiting. The inner doors were strong enough to withstand the crushing force of the sea, and neither door could be opened at the same time, to prevent flooding. Spare torpedoes sat on racks just behind the loaded tubes and took up so much room, the crew slept on top of the ordnance.
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One detail Hollywood movies rarely got right was the sound a torpedo made exiting a sub. In the case of the
I-401
, a hissing of compressed air, followed by water flowing back into the tube, could be heard, though only in the torpedo room, since the compartment’s watertight doors were shut during battle. Japanese torpedoes were quieter than their noisy American counterparts, but a slight shudder could still be felt in the torpedo room whenever a “fish” launched.
NO. 2 AND 3 COMPARTMENTS (STARBOARD): FORWARD CREW BERTHING
Directly aft of the torpedo room was the first of three crew compartments for enlisted men. The
I-401
carried 174 crew and 21 officers,
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though the total number exceeded 200 once pilots and aircraft technicians were counted.
‡
There were never enough berths for enlisted men. Officers and CPOs may have merited their own bunk, but third-class ratings slept wherever they found space,
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including on rice sacks.
The two forward crew compartments extended aft for nearly a quarter of the sub’s starboard side. Each compartment had a three-tiered bunk configuration similar to the
Segundo
. Despite the
I-401
’s size, however, conditions were just as cramped, with one
important difference: Nambu’s sub carried almost three times as many men.