JS Makishio

JS Makishio
History
Japan
Name
  • Makishio
  • (まきしお)
Ordered1996
BuilderMitsubishi, Kobe
Cost¥52.19 million
Laid down6 March 1996
Launched26 November 1998
Commissioned29 March 2001
Reclassified17 March 2023 (as training vessel)
Home portKure
IdentificationPennant number: TSS-[clarification needed]
StatusActive as training submarine
General characteristics
Class & typeOyashio-class submarine
Displacement
Length81.7 m (268 ftin)
Beam8.9 m (29 ftin)
Draught7.4 m (24 ftin)
Propulsion
  • Diesel-electric
  • 2 Kawasaki 12V25S diesel engines
  • 2 Kawasaki alternators
  • 2 Toshiba motors
  • 3,400 hp (2,500 kW) surfaced
  • 7,750 hp (5,780 kW) submerged
Speed
  • 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) (surfaced)
  • 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) (submerged)
Complement70 (10 officers)
Sensors &
processing systems
  • Sonar: Hughes/Oki ZQQ-6 hull-mounted sonar, flank arrays, 1 towed array
  • Radar: JRC ZPS 6 I-band search radar.
Armament

JS Makishio (SS-593) is the fourth boat of the Oyashio-class submarines. She was commissioned on 29 March 2001.[1]

Construction and career

Makishio was laid down at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Kobe Shipyard on 6 March 1996 and launched on 26 November 1998. She was commissioned on 9 March 2000[dubiousdiscuss] and deployed to Yokosuka.[2][3]

On 6 August 2008, she left Kure for Hawaii for the major naval exercise RIMPAC 2008, and she returned to Kure on 12 November.[citation needed]

The submarine participated in RIMPAC 2019 from 30 March to 29 June 2019, and she conducted offshore training and facility use training in the Hawaiian Islands area.[4]

Upon Oyashio's decommissioning on 17 March 2023, Makishio was converted to a training submarine as a replacement.[5]

References

  1. ^ Takao, Ishibashi (2002). All Maritime Self-Defense Force Ships 1952-2002. Namiki Shobo.
  2. ^ World Ships Special Edition 66th Collection Maritime Self-Defense Force All Ship History. Gaijinsha. 2004.
  3. ^ World Ships Special Edition Vol. 665: History of Maritime Self-Defense Force Submarines. Gaijinsha. 2006.
  4. ^ "平成30年度第2回米国派遣訓練(潜水艦)について" [FY2018 Second US Expedition Training (Submarine)] (PDF) (Press release) (in Japanese). Maritime Staff Office. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  5. ^ "「おやしお」25年の歴史に幕 「まきしお」が練習潜水艦に(2023年3月17日)" ["Oyashio" comes to an end after 25 years of history; "Makishio" becomes training submarine (March 17, 2023)]. Asagumo News (in Japanese). 9 May 2023. Archived from the original on 9 May 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2025.

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