Japanese escort ship CD-75

CD-75 was a C Type class escort ship (Kaibōkan) of the Imperial Japanese Navy during the Second World War.

History
Japan
Name: CD-75
Builder: Nipponkai Zosensho K.K., Toyama
Laid down: 5 April 1944
Launched: 5 August 1944
Completed: 21 April 1945
Commissioned: 21 April 1945
Stricken: 30 November 1945
Fate: scuttled after running aground, 10 August 1945
General characteristics
Class and type: Type C escort ship
Displacement: 745 long tons (757 t) (standard)
Length: 67.5 m (221 ft)
Beam: 8.4 m (27 ft 7 in)
Draught: 2.9 m (10 ft)
Propulsion:
  • Geared diesel engines
  • 1,900 hp (1,417 kW)
  • 2 shafts
Speed: 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h; 19.0 mph)
Range: 6,500 nmi (12,000 km) at 14 kn (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement: 136
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • Type 22-Go radar
  • Type 93 sonar
  • Type 3 hydrophone
Armament:

History

She was laid down by Nipponkai Zosensho K.K. at their Toyama shipyard on 5 April 1944, launched on 5 August 1944, and completed and commissioned on 21 April 1945. During the war CD-75 was mostly busy on escort duties.[1]

On 18 June 1945, in Toyama Bay, the submarine USS Bonefish (SS-223) was sunk by the combined efforts of the escort ships CD-75, Okinawa, CD-63, CD-158 and CD-207.[2]

On 10 August 1945, she departed from Wakkanai, Hokkaido, and soon after ran aground.[1] She was scuttled by her crew off Nō, Niigata.[1] Some sources indicate she may have struck a mine.[1] On 30 November 1945, she was struck from the Navy List.[1]

gollark: But my launcher uses the much simpler heuristic of putting the 20 most recently used apps in a list and works basically as well.
gollark: Google's application launcher on Android guesses what apps you might want to use based on location and time and stuff apparently.
gollark: But having computers predict user behaviour granularly is really hard, so the only capabilities for that are very primitive.
gollark: CPUs also have prefetching for cache.
gollark: It might stick them in swap. You'd want to use mlock or something to make a block of memory which is actually guaranteed to be in memory.

References

  1. Hackett, Bob; Kingsepp, Sander. "IJN Escort CD-75: Tabular Record of Movement". combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  2. "Chapter VII: 1945". The Official Chronology of the U.S. Navy in World War II. 2006. Retrieved 19 January 2012.

Additional sources

  • "Escort Vessels of the Imperial Japanese Navy special issue". Ships of the World (in Japanese). Vol. 45. Kaijinsha. February 1996.
  • Model Art Extra No.340, Drawings of Imperial Japanese Naval Vessels Part-1 (in Japanese). Model Art Co. Ltd. October 1989.
  • The Maru Special, Japanese Naval Vessels No.49, Japanese submarine chasers and patrol boats (in Japanese). Ushio Shobō. March 1981.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.