The WW2 Japanese Mini Sub after it was Restored on Guam.Travel Photo by Dan Collier. |
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After restoration has been completed, the WW2 Japanese two man mini sub looks like it was new. The entire Japanese submarine was taken apart, restored, repainted and put back together for display at the museum on Guam. This was a huge job and was mostly done out of the publics eyes so these photos are rare and a very important part of history. With more than two thousand mini subs being made, the Japanese mini subs were only credited with only one ship being sunk. At the Yellow Airplane Online Museum |
Dan Collier standing in front of the Japanese Mini Submarine on the island of Guam in the Pacific.
The
weather seemed very mild
compared to past
visits.
This last
5-month visit was the
fourth time
I’ve been
there since 1956.
Lots
of rain this time out
and the seas seemed to
be rough and angry,
while the water on the
beaches seemed much
higher.
Erosion to
the beaches is a
problem, including a
beach where the US
marines landed
(Asan
Beach) and the waves
have been pounding on a
section of the beach
that has a picnic area
on it, forming a little
4-foot-high cliff that
continues to take a
beating, and eroding the
picnic area, where large
pieces of sod fall onto
the beach.
One concrete picnic table has one-third of its length hanging over this cliff, so it gives an idea on how bad the erosion is. This action did wash out a badly rusted Type 99 Japanese rifle that I found and was able to pack in my suitcase and bring home.. I often find war-related items while combing along the beach.. Must’ve been a point of high activity at one time..
I will
make at least one more
trip to Guam during the
next couple years.. I
also visited nearby
Tinian and Saipan during
this last
visit. Visited the two
bomb pits where the
atomic bombs were
stored, as well as some
old bombed-out Japanese
buildings that are well
grown-over by the
vegetation..
And
Saipan’s famous Suicide
Cliffs.. History is
all around me as I stand
on the very grounds
where all this took
place..
--Dan
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This is where the old Japanese Flag used to be located. The Mini-Sub rebuilders didn't thing that the flag was the original so they removed it, but you can still see it's remains under the new paint. |
This is the Mini-Submarine after a total restoration.
Click Here's the Japanese Mini-Sub Periscope.
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Original photos of the captured Mini Sub being towed to Guam |
This is an interior view Schematic of the Japanese Mini Sub. |
Counter Rotating Propellers on this Japanese two man minisub. |
Japanese Two-Man Submarine This two-man submarine ran aground at Guam's Togcha Beach in mid August 1944 while on a mission to attack American shore facilities. The battle for Guam had ended more than a week before. Although Japan built more than 2000 midget submarines between 1936 and 1945 and deployed them throughout the Pacific, these subs were credited with sinking only one ship during all of World War II. |
Torpedo tubes on the World War 2 Japanese Mini Sub. |
If anyone knows more about this Japanese WW2 mini submarine or has any more pictures, write me a letter at the bottom of this page. |
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The 34th Fighter Squadron fly's a WW2 P-47 Thunderbolt Click on photo to see exhibit |
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