Japanese submarine I-402
I-402 was an Imperial Japanese Navy Sentoku-type (or I-400-class) submarine commissioned in 1945 for service in World War II. Originally intended to be a submarine aircraft carrier like her sister ships and, she instead was completed as a submarine tanker, but entered service less than a month before the end of the war and never carried out a tanker voyage. She surrendered to the United States at the end of the war in 1945 and was scuttled in 1946. Until 1965, the Sentaku-type submarines were the largest submarines ever commissioned.
Characteristics
The I-400-class submarines had four diesel engines and carried enough fuel to circumnavigate the world one-and-a-half times. Measuring long overall, they displaced, more than double their typical American contemporaries and much larger than the most common Japanese submarine of the era, the Type B1, which was feet long and displaced 2,584 tons. Until the commissioning of the United States Navy ballistic missile submarine in 1965, the I-400-class were the largest submarines ever commissioned.The cross-section of the pressure hull had a unique figure-of-eight shape which afforded the strength and stability to support the weight of a large aircraft hangar and three floatplanes, with the conning tower offset to port to allow room for them. While I-402 was under construction, however, her aircraft and aircraft facilities were deleted, and she instead was completed as a submarine tanker capable of transporting aviation gasoline from the Japanese-occupied Netherlands East Indies to Japan.
Like other I-400-class submarines, I-402 was armed with eight torpedo tubes, all in the bow, with 20 Type 95 torpedoes, a Type 11 deck gun on the after deck of the hangar, three waterproofed Type 96 triple-mount antiaircraft guns mounted atop what would have been the hangar — one forward and two aft of the conning tower — and a single Type 96 25 mm antiaircraft gun mounted just aft of the bridge.
I-400-class submarines had a rather noisy special trim system that allowed them to loiter submerged and stationary while awaiting the return of their aircraft; demagnetization cables meant to protect against magnetic mines by nullifying the submarine′s magnetic field; an air search radar, two air/surface-search radar sets, and a radar warning receiver; and an anechoic coating intended to make detection of the submarine while submerged more difficult by absorbing or diffusing sonar pulses and dampening reverberations from the submarine's internal machinery.
Construction and commissioning
Ordered as Submarine No. 5233, I-402 was laid down on 20 October 1943 by the Sasebo Naval Arsenal at Sasebo, Japan. She was launched on 5 September 1944, and was completed and commissioned as a submarine tanker on 24 July 1945Service history
World War II
Upon commissioning, I-402 was attached to the Kure Naval District and assigned to Submarine Division 1 — which also included her sister ships and and the submarines and — in the 6th Fleet. She was in port at Kure, Japan, on 11 August 1945 when Iwo Jima-based United States Army Air Forces P-51D Mustang fighters raided the area after 10:40. She suffered several near misses from bombs, and bomb fragments punctured her main fuel tanks in two places. Two members of her crew were wounded.Hostilities between Japan and the Allies ended on 15 August 1945 before I-402 could begin her first voyage to the Japanese-occupied Netherlands East Indies for aviation gasoline. She surrendered to the Allies at Kure in September 1945.