I-121-class submarine
The I-121-class submarine was a class of minelayer submarine in the Imperial Japanese Navy, serving from the 1920s to World War II. The IJN classed it as a Kiraisen type submarine. The type name, was shortened from Kirai Fusetsu Sensuikan.
Design and construction
The four I-121-class submarines — I-21, I-22, I-23, and I-24, renumbered,,, and, respectively, on 1 June 1938 — were the Imperial Japanese Navy's only submarine minelayers. Their design was based on that of the Imperial German Navy minelaying submarine, a Type UE II submarine which was the largest of seven German submarines transferred to Japan as a war reparation after World War I and served in the Imperial Japanese Navy as O-6 from 1920 to 1921. Like UB-125, the Kiraisen-type submarines had two diesel engines producing a combined, could carry 42 mines, and had four torpedo tubes and a single deck gun — a gun on the Japanese submarines in contrast to a gun on UB-125. Compared to the German submarine, they were larger — longer, and displacing 220 more tons on the surface and 300 more tons submerged — and had a longer range both on the surface — farther at — and submerged — farther at. They were slower than UB-125 both surfaced and submerged, carried two fewer torpedoes, and had could dive to only compared to for UB-125.The Imperial Japanese Navy ordered six I-121-class submarines, of which four were completed and two were cancelled. The Kawasaki Yard at Kobe, Japan, built all four of the submarines. In mid-1940, all four submarines underwent conversion into submarine tankers. Retaining their minelaying and torpedo capabilities, they were modified so that each of them could carry 15 tons of aviation gasoline with which to refuel flying boats, allowing the flying boats to extend their range during reconnaissance and bombing missions by meeting the submarines in harbors and lagoons for more fuel.