The Pacific War Online Encyclopedia: Gato Class, U.S.

Submarines (original) (raw)

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Photograph of Gato-class submarine ONI 222 Schematic diagram of Gato-class submarine ONI 222

Specifications:

Tonnage 1526 tons standard displacement2410 tons submerged
Dimensions 311'9" by 27'3" by 16'10"95.0m by 8.3m by 4.9m
Maximum speed 20 knots surfaced9 knots submerged
Dive to 300 feetto 90 meters
Complement 80
Armament 6 21" (53cm) bow / 4 21" stern torpedotubes (24 torpedoes)1 3"/50 AA gun1 0.50 Browning machine gunUp to 40 mines in place of torpedoes
Machinery 2-shaft diesel-electric (5400 shp surface, 2740 shp submerged)
Bunkerage 300 tons diesel oil
Range 11000 nautical miles (20,000km) at 10 knots surfaced96 nautical miles (180 km) at 2 knots submerged
Modifications 1942: Sides of cigarette deck cut down to reduce silhouette. 1943: Fairing around periscope shears removed and sheltered station forward of open bridge cut down to reduce silhouette. Some main ballast tanks converted to fuel ballast tanks to increase bunkerage by 50 tons. One of the periscopes was removed and replaced by a radar mast for SD radar on many units. The 0.50 Browning began to be replaced by a 20mm Oerlikon AA gun. Late 1943: 3" guns replaced with 4"/50 guns on new construction and boats under refit. 1944: Radar was upgraded to SJ as this became available. Light antiaircraft was upgraded to 1 or 2 40mm Bofors AA guns. Late 1944: 4" guns begin to be replaced with a 5"/25 gun. 1945: 2 5" guns authorized with an improvised central director. By the end of the war, the authorized sensor suite included SPR-1 radar warning receivers and SJ and SV radar. Improvements in machinery had raised the surfaced speed to 22 knots. Some 24 boats were to be refitted as radar pickets for the invasion of Japan, but the program became moot with the Japanese surrender after two boats (Flying Fish and Finback) had been modified. The modifications included replacing one periscope with SV fighter direction radar and radio equipment.

The Gatos were just beginning to join the fleet at the start of the war. The last peacetime design, approved in November 1939, they closely resembled the Tambors, but their large engine rooms were subdivided by a pressure-proof bulkhead and their official maximum operating depth was increased to 300' (90 meters). They were a good design that was suitable for mass production, and they became the definitive U.S.submarine model of the Pacific War. They set new standards of habitability and endurance, had sophisticated fire control computers (by the standards of the day), and were heavily armed. These were all desirable qualities for a fleet submarine, meant to scout ahead of the battle line and do as much damage to the enemy battle line as possible prior to a decisive gunnery duel. Ironically, the Gatos would see very little action in this role, due to the eclipse of the battleship by the fleet carrier. They would be employed instead in the commerce raiding role.

With war looming, the Navy froze the design in 1940 and began focusing on making arrangements for mass production. Electric Boat Company, the usual private yard for submarine construction, was initially assigned sixteen boats, while the Navy's Portsmouth and Mare Island yards were assigned eight and four respectively. These were the first of a flood of construction orders that would eventually number 77 boats and require both the expansion of existing yards and the use of new yards. Portsmouth made extensive use of prefabrication to minimize time on its limited number of ways, setting a record of 56 days from laying down to launch of Cisco. The initial contract with Electric Boat included funds to double that yard's capacity, and later contracts funded the adjacent Victory Yard, which was owned by the government but operated by Electric Boat. Additional construction was assigned to Cramp Shipbuilding Company, Boston Navy Yard, and Manitowoc Shipbuilding Company, none of which had prior experience with submarine construction. The Cramp and Boston efforts did not work out well, but Manitowoc proved an unlikely success story. Located on a narrow river in Wisconsin, just off the Great Lakes, Manitowoc worked out a scheme for moving the boats by locks and canals to the Mississippi River and the open sea, and the Manitowoc boats acquired a solid reputation in the submarine service.

There was some friction between the Navy and Electric Boat under the pressure of war. Electric Boat naturally focused on rapid, economical mass production of basically sound boats, completing Corvina in a record 317 days from laying down to commissioning. However, the Navy demanded the constant addition of the latest improvements to the boats, which worked against mass construction. It is perhaps no surprise that, in the end, the Navy more or less got its way, though most Electric Boat units spent some time in a Navy yard for last-minuted alterations before being sent to the fleet.

The boats set a new standard for diving depth, which had been set at 250' (76 meters) since the construction of the Dolphin class. The design bureaus concluded that the existing hull designs could theoretically reach 500' (152 meters) without collapsing and were certainly safe to 300' (90 meters), and it was only necessary to require the hull fittings to meet the same standard to give the new boats a design dive depth of 300'. The hulls were in fact virtually identical to those of the Tambors.

Their chief faults were that they were not very maneuverable (having a turning radius of 150 yards or 137m submerged) and were slow to dive. The original conning towers were also quite high. Once war broke out, the conning towers were cut down considerably to reduce the silhouette of the boats. But the chief limitation of American submarines generally was not the submarines themselves, but the atrocious torpedoesthey carried, which did not begin to approach acceptable performance until late 1943.

The gun armament proved more important than anticipated, and the 3" gun proved inadequate. However, during the design process, Captain Charles Lockwoodhad insisted on a gun foundation strong enough for a 5" gun, allowing many of these boats to be upgunned later in the war. The conning tower modifications consisted of removing the fairing around the periscope shears and cutting down the rear half of the conning tower in 1942, and cutting down the forward part of the conning tower in 1943. The latter modification created a platform for a second machine gun mount. Other improvements were made to reduce the dive time, such as cutting more openings in the superstructure to let air escape from under the weather deck more quickly and stowing the bow planes already angled for dive. These changes reduced dive times from 50 seconds when war broke out to less than 35 seconds by the time of the Japanese surrender. Camouflage was changed from pitch black to various shades of gray, which proved less visible at night in the tropics.

Twelve of the boats were ordered with H.O.R. engines, which lived up to their dismal reputation for reliability. All were eventually replaced with General Motors engines. General improvements in machinery raised the average surface speed by about two knots by the end of the war.

Although the U.S. Navy carried out some experiments with a schnorkel, the ability of American submarines to operate at night against the Japanese was so great that the schnorkel was judged not worth the weight, space, and discomfort to the crews for any slight advantage it might confer, and none were fitted to any operational boats.

The basic Gato design was sound enough that the next class, the Balaos, were little more than Gatos constructed with thicker hull plates. In fact, the existence of the Balao class was successfully kept secret by the Navy throughout the war, and even the submarine force spoke of "thin-skinned" and "thick-skinned" Gatos. Improvements adopted by the Balaos were generally retrofitted to the Gatos as well, so that the two classes remained very similar throughout the war.

Units in the Pacific:

Silversides Completed 1941-12-15 (Mare Island)
Trigger Completed 1942-1-30 (Mare Island) Disappeared 1945-3-27 off Okinawa
Steelhead Arrived 1942-2
Gato Arrived 1942-2-26
Drum Arrived 1942-3
Greenling Arrived 1942-3-14-4
Flying Fish Arrived 1942-4
Grouper Arrived 1942-4-7
Hoe Arrived 1942-4-26
Finback Arrived 1942-5
Wahoo Completed 1942-5-15 (Mare Island) Sunk by depth charge1943-10-11 in La Perouse Strait
Kingfish Arrived 1942-8-10
Albacore Arrived 1942-6 Mined1944-11-7 off Hokkaido
Growler Arrived 1942-6-1 Sunk by depth charge 1944-11-8 south of Mindoro
Whale Completed 1942-6-1 (Mare Island)
Grunion Arrived 1942-6-3 Disappeared 1942-7-30 in the Aleutians
Halibut Arrived 1942-6-20
Guardfish Arrived 1942-7-4
Amberjack Arrived 1942- 8 Disappeared 1943-2-16 in the Bismarcks
Tunny Completed 1942-9-1 (Mare Island)
Runner Arrived 1943-1-1 Minedca. 1943-7-4 off Hokkaido
Sawfish Arrived 1943-1-11
Tinosa Completed 1943-1-15 (Mare Island)
Scamp Arrived 1943-1-26
Tullibee Completed 1943-2-15 (Mare Island) Sunk 1944-3-27 by own defective torpedo
Snook Arrived 1943-3-10 Disappeared 1945-4-20 east of Formosa
Peto Arrived 1943-3-14 (Brisbane)
Scorpion Arrived 1943-3-15 Minedca. 1944-2-24 in East China Sea
Pogy Arrived 1943-3-25
Gunnel Arrived 1943-4
Harder Arrived 1943- 5 Sunk by depth charge1944-8-24 west of Luzon
Pompon Arrived 1943-5
Jack Arrived 1943-5-1
Lapon Arrived 1943-5-11
Gurnard Arrived 1943-5-18
Mingo Arrived 1943-5-21
Paddle Arrived 1943-6-15
Cabrilla Arrived 1943-7
Sunfish Completed 1943-7-15 (Mare Island)
Pargo Arrived 1943-7-16
Blackfish Arrived 1943-8
Cero Arrived 1943-8
Herring Arrived 1943-8 Sunk by coastal batteries 1944-6-1 off Matsuwa
Muskallunge Arrived 1943-8-1
Cisco Arrived 1943-8-7
Bluefish Arrived 1943-8-21 (Brisbane)
Shad Arrived 1943-8-21
Bonefish Arrived 1943-8-30 (Brisbane) Sunk by depth charge1945-6-18 in Toyama Bay
Barb Arrived 1943-9
Corvina Arrived 1943- 9 Torpedoed by I-176 1943-11-16 south of Truk
Dace Arrived 1943-9
Puffer Arrived 1943-9 (Brisbane)
Rasher Arrived 1943-9-11 (Brisbane)
Angler Arrived 1943-10
Capelin Arrived 1943-10 (Brisbane) Disappeared 1943-12-2 off Makassar
Cod Arrived 1943-10-2 (Brisbane)
Crevalle Arrived 1943-10-11 (Brisbane)
Raton Arrived 1943-10-16 (Brisbane)
Redfin Arrived 1943-10-22
Ray Arrived 1943-10-30 (Brisbane)
Darter Arrived 1943-11 Run aground 1944-10-25 in the Philippines
Robalo Arrived 1943-11 Mined 1944-7-26 east of Luzon
Flasher Arrived 1943-12
Flier Arrived 1943-12 Mined 1944-8-13 north of the Phillipines
Bashaw Arrived 1944-1-14
Flounder Arrived 1944-2
Gabilan Arrived 1944-3
Bream Arrived 1944-4
Cavalla Arrived 1944-4
Hammerhead Arrived 1944-4
Cobia Arrived 1944-5
Sealion Arrived 1944-5-3
Croaker Arrived 1944-6
Escolar Arrived 1944- 6 Disappeared 1944-10-17 off Tsushima; likely mined
Caimen Arrived 1944-8
Dragonet Arrived 1944-9
Devilfish Arrived 1944-11
Chub Arrived 1945-1
Cabezon Arrived 1945-3
Capitaine Arrived 1945-3
Carbonero Arrived 1945-5
Carp Arrived 1945-5-5
Entemedor Arrived 1945-6
Gato-class submarine at sea U.S. Navy View of Gato-class submarine from forward U.S. Navy View of conning tower on Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy Rear view of conning tower on Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy View from aft of Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy View of original conn tower profile U.S. Navy
View of modified conn tower profile U.S. Navy View of modified conn tower profile U.S. Navy Torpedo room of Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy Wardroom of Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy Interior conning tower of Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy Control room of Gato-class submarine U.S. Navy

References

Alden (1979)

Blair (1975)

DANFS

Friedman (1995)

Johnston (2010)

The Pacific War Online Encyclopedia © 2007, 2009, 2012, 2013 by Kent G. Budge. Index


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