Japanese submarine I-178 explained

Japanese Submarine I-178 (I-78, until May 20, 1942) was a Kaidai-type cruiser submarine that saw service during World War II in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Commissioned on December 26, 1942, I-178 was a KD7 sub-class boat that sailed on just two patrols off the east coast of Australia during 1943, going missing sometime after June 17, 1943.

Design and construction

The KD7-type Kaidais was long and displaced when surfaced. The diesel-electric propulsion system provided a maximum speed of when surfaced or when submerged. The boats could operate for 75 days before resupply. The Armament consisted of six forward-facing torpedo tubes firing Long Lance torpedoes (with 14 carried), a 4.7-inch deck gun, and a 25-millimetre anti-aircraft gun.

The submarine was built at the Mitsubishi Yard. She was completed in 1942.[1]

Operational history

Assigned to Submarine Squadron Three of the Sixth Fleet, I-178 sailed from Japan on March 30, 1943, and reached Truk on April 7. Three days later, the submarine left to commence a patrol off the eastern coast of Australia, supporting sister boat I-177. At 18:45 on April 27, 1943, the submarine torpedoed the Liberty ship Lydia M. Child, 90 miles off the coast of Newcastle, New South Wales. There were allegedly no casualties among the freighter's 62 crew, who were all rescued the next day. I-178 escaped despite multiple attempted bombing runs by a Catalina from No. 11 Squadron RAAF.[1]

She returned to Truk on May 18, but was ordered to sail again two days later, returning to the Australian coast. The patrol was initially uneventful, but after sending a routine radio signal on June 17, I-178 was never heard from again.[1]

Fate

On August 4, 1943, the submarine was declared lost with all hands. She was struck from the Navy List on 1 September.[1]

Claims for sinking the submarine vary, with different sources identifying the responsible party as the U.S. Navy submarine chasers SC-669 or SC-699 off Espírito Santo on May 29, 1943 (this claim is discounted, as I-178 was still in radio contact until June 17),[2] three Bristol Beauforts of No. 32 Squadron RAAF off Coffs Harbour, New South Wales on 17 June (the claim is reasonably strong),[3] or the destroyer near the Solomon Islands on August 25, 1943.[4]

References

Notes and References

  1. Crowhurst, Who sank I-178?, p. 27
  2. Web site: IJN Submarine I-178: Tabular Record of Movement . Bob . Hackett . Sander . Kingsepp . combinedfleet.com . 2014. 12 December 2014.
  3. Web site: RecordSearch - National Archives of Australia .
  4. Crowhurst, Who sank I-178?, pp. 28–29