Jump to content

Ōtori-class torpedo boat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ōtori class
Kiji 1937
Class overview
Preceded byChidori class
Succeeded byMatsu class (small destroyers)
Built1934-1937
In commission1936-1946
Planned16
Completed8
Cancelled8
Lost7
Retired1
General characteristics
TypeTorpedo boat
Displacement
  • 840 tons standard
  • 960 tons for battle condition[1]
Length
  • 88.5 m (290 ft 4 in) full
  • 85.0 m (278 ft 10 in) waterline
Beam8.18 m (26 ft 10 in)
Draft2.76 m (9 ft 1 in)
Depth4.85 m (15 ft 11 in)
Propulsion
  • 2 × Kampon water tube boilers
  • 2 × Kanpon impulse turbines
  • 2 × shafts, 19,000 shp (14,000 kW)
Speed30.5 knots (56.5 km/h; 35.1 mph)
Range4,000 nmi (7,400 km; 4,600 mi) at 14 kn (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement129
Armament

The Ōtori-class torpedo boat (鴻型水雷艇, Ōtori-gata suiraitei) were a class of eight fast torpedo boats of the Imperial Japanese Navy built before and operated during World War II.

Development

[edit]

To circumvent the terms of the 1930 London Naval Treaty, which limited its total destroyer tonnage the Imperial Japanese Navy designed the Chidori class torpedo boat, but planned to arm it with half the armament of a Fubuki class destroyer. The resultant design was top-heavy and unstable, resulting in the 1934 Tomozuru Incident, in which one of the Chidori-class vessels capsized. The subsequent investigation revealed the fundamental design flaw, and the four vessels in the class which had been completed were extensively rebuilt, and the remaining sixteen vessels projected were cancelled in favor of a new design which would address these design issues from the beginning. Sixteen Ōtori-class vessels were ordered in the 1934 2nd Naval Armaments Supplement Programme, of which eight were completed between 1936 and 1937. The remaining eight were cancelled in favor of building additional submarine chasers.[3][4]

Design

[edit]

Benefiting from the redesign of the Chidori-class, the Ōtori-class had a slightly longer hull with an increased beam. The bridge structure was also lower than on the Chidori-class to help keep the center-of-gravity low. Two Kampon geared turbines powered by two Kampon water-tube boilers produced a total of 19,000 shaft horsepower (14,000 kW), which gave the ships more power than the Chidori-class, and thus a slightly higher maximum speed of 30.0 knots (34.5 mph; 55.6 km/h)[3]

The armament of the Ōtori-class was almost the same as for the rebuilt Chidori-class with a main battery of three single 12 cm/45 3rd Year Type naval guns which could elevate to 55 degrees for a limited anti-aircraft capability. The torpedo mount was upgraded from a twin to a triple torpedo launcher, and a single Type 94 depth charge launcher was carried. However, anti-aircraft weaponry was only a single license-built Vickers 40 mm (2 pounder pom pom).[3]

During the Pacific War, in 1944 survivors had the aft gun removed, and up to three twin-mount and five single-mount Type 96 25mm AA guns were installed as well as a Type 22 and a Type 13 radar. The number of depth charges was increased to 48.[3]

Operational service

[edit]

The Ōtori-class were used extensively from the start of the Pacific War to escort invasion convoys to the Philippines, Dutch East Indies and the Solomon Islands. Hiyodori sank the USS Amberjack (SS-219) during the Solomon Islands campaign on 16 February 1943. Seven of the eight ships in the class were sunk by submarines or air attack in the Pacific or the South China Sea and only Kiji survived to the end of the war.

Ships in class

[edit]
Ship Kanji Builder Laid down Launched Completed Fate
Ōtori , 'stork' Maizuru Naval Arsenal 8 Nov 1934 25 Apr 1935 10 Oct 1936 Sunk by aircraft of Task Force 58 NW of Saipan, 12 Jun 1944
Hiyodori , 'brown-eared bulbul' Ishikawajima Shipyards 26 Nov 1934 25 Oct 1935 20 Dec 1936 Sunk by USS Gunnel in South China Sea, 17 Nov 1944
Hayabusa , 'peregrine falcon' Yokohama Dock Company 19 Dec 1934 28 Oct 1935 7 Dec 1936 Sunk by aircraft in Sibuyan Sea, 24 Sep 1944
Kasasagi , 'magpie' Ōsaka Iron Works 4 Mar 1935 18 Oct 1935 15 Jan 1937 Sunk by USS Bluefish in Flores Sea, 26 Sep 1943
Kiji , 'pheasant' Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding, Tamano 24 Oct 1935 26 Jan 1937 31 Jul 1937 Surrendered to Soviet Union at Nakhodka, on 3 Oct 1947; Renamed Vnimatel'nyy; Decommissioned 31 Oct 1957
Kari , 'wild goose' Yokohama Dock Company 11 May 1936 20 Jan 1937 20 Sep 1937 Sunk by USS Baya in Java Sea, 16 July 1945
Sagi , 'snowy heron' Harima Shipyards 20 May 1936 30 Jan 1937 31 Jul 1937 Sunk by USS Gunnel W of Luzon, 8 Nov 1944
Hato , 'dove' Ishikawajima Shipyards 28 May 1936 25 Jan 1937 7 Aug 1937 Sunk by aircraft at Hong Kong, 16 Oct 1944
Hatsutaka 初鷹 Cancelled, 1937
Aotaka 蒼鷹
Wakataka 若鷹
Kumataka 熊鷹
Yamadori 山鳥
Mizutori 水鳥
Umidori 海鳥
Komadori 駒鳥

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Ōtori was 1,012 tons for battle condition.
  2. ^ Kari was equipped 2 × Type 96 25 mm (0.98 in) AA guns.
  3. ^ a b c d Stille, Mark (2017). Imperial Japanese Navy Antisubmarine Escorts 1941–45. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. pp. 18–20. ISBN 978-1-4728-1817-1.
  4. ^ The cancelled units, Torpedo boats #13 to #20 under the 1934 Programme, were projected to have been named Hatsutaka, Aotaka, Wakataka, Kumataka ("bear hawk"), Yamadori ("mountain bird"), Mizudori ("water fowl"), Umidori ("seabird") and Komadori; however, no contracts were placed by the time the order was changed in 1937 in favour of Submarine chasers #4 to #11.

References

[edit]
  • Collection of writings by Sizuo Fukui Vol.5, Stories of Japanese Destroyers, Kōjinsha (Japan) 1993, ISBN 4-7698-0611-6
  • Model Art Extra No.340, Drawings of Imperial Japanese Naval Vessels Part-1, Model Art Co. Ltd. (Japan), October 1989, Book code 08734-10
  • The Maru Special, Japanese Naval Vessels No.39 Japanese Torpedo Boats, Ushio Shobō (Japan), May 1980, Book code 68343-40
[edit]