Tsuta Class destroyer
developed from the previous Hamakaze class, the Tsuta was the first class of post WWI destroyers to be designed, as a result many lessons that will learn to during the Great War were incorporated into it's design, and the class would serve as the basic blueprint for future Zipang destroyers. the class what was the first to Mount the newly developed type 18 127mm/38 and type 19 600mm torpedo.
Displacement: 1,450 tonnes standard
Dimensions: 304ft x 28ft x 9.5ft
Machinery: 2-shaft geared turbines, 4 water tube boiler, 26,500 shp
Speed: 37 knts
Endurance: 5,000 nautical miles at 10 knots
Armor: 25mm splinter protection
Armament: Tsuta as Commissioned: 1920
1x3 12cm Type-19
3x2 60cm Type-18 torpedo tubes
Armament: Take as Decommissioned: 1945
1x2 12cm Type 25 Mod 6
2x9 3cm Type 28 Mod 3 autocannons
1x5 2cm Type 31 Mod 2 autocannons
1x2 60cm Type-18 torpedo tubes
Tsuta was commissioned in the summer of 1920 and was the first member of a brand new class of post Great Wall destroyers, as a result many lessons learnt in that conflict or incorporated into her classes design, upon her commissioning she would be placed into the first Destroyer Squadron several members of this particular Squadron fought at the Battle of Jutland with several of them being lost in that battle. by 1926 a father 12 members of the class will be constructed and separated amongst all 6 Destroyer squadrons, in 1928 two members of the class would be on routine Patrol in the Zipang Straits, both ships have departed from their home port earlier that day and were on the return journey home when the Lookouts on one of the Destroyers spotted smoke plumes in the distance, these smoke plumes on closer inspection were found to be the funnel exhaust of a Japanese warship, as the distance between the Destroyers and the unidentified Japanese ship closed the Japanese warship was identified as a sendai class scout Cruiser, as the Cruiser and the Destroyers got closer the captain on one of the Destroyers try to communicate with the Japanese Cruiser however no response was given, with the distance between the ships closing rapidly the lookouts reported that the Japanese ship had fired its forward main guns approximately 10 seconds later two shells Splashdown in between both destroyers narrowly missing both of them, one of the captain's ordered to return fire with a warning shot, however before the shot could be fired the Cruiser turned away disengaging from what could have been a potential military engagement, upon the Destroyers return to their home port this incident was reported straight to the Admiralty which was very quickly passed on to the House of Commons, many more incidents like this would continue to happen throughout the rest of the 1920s and into the early 1930s.
On the 4th of September 1934 Tsuta and several other members of her class that belongs to the second Destroyer Squadron were all at anchor in Tajima Bay preparing for a large exercise that was to take place on the 6th, when distressing news came over the radio saying that a Zipang light Cruiser had been engaged by a Japanese destroyer without provocation with no alternatives the light Cruiser had to return fire, as a result on the 5th of September Zipang officially declared War on Japan, over the course of the following weeks the first and second Destroyer Squadron will try unsuccessfully to counter Japanese naval operations around the northern coast of Zipang, however due to the Japanese destroyers being more modern and more heavily armed, meant that the Tsuta class proved themselves to be woefully inadequate, on the 21st of October the first strike Squadron would try to intercept what they believed to be a Japanese reinforcement convoy destined for Northern coast, however the convoy escorts proved to be much more substantial then a couple of destroyers with the convoy being escorted bye buy for heavy Cruisers two light Cruisers and 10 destroyers 6 of which were the much more powerful fubuki class, the first Destroyer Squadron suffered heavy casualties with 6 ships sunk and to so badly damaged that the cruise abandon them with both of them being scuttled with scuttling charges, by the morning of the 22nd the first Destroyer Squadron had retreated from the area however the Squadron would come and air attack from Japanese carrier dive bombers and would lose two more destroyers, the remaining members of the first Destroyer Squadron would take part in the major fleet operation of November 5th where two more destroyers would be sunk, with the remaining ships falling into Japanese control at the end of the conflict on them on November 9th 1934.
after the conflict the remaining members of the Tsuta class would be incorporated into the newly reformed people's Zipang navy, however due to their age many of them did not receive refits during the latter half of the 1930s, however with tensions in Europe rising in 1939 and Japan for war with the US all remaining ships of the class, underwent various refit with some of them having new new DP guns added while others had add a reinforced aircraft Armament installed consisting of 4 twin 30 mm cannons at the expense of one of the twin torpedo tubes being removed by 1941 all members of the class had underwent some kind of refit, however this refit that all of the members received only address some of the classes problems with the biggest one of which being age, but nonetheless they were pressed into service mainly as convoy escort ships and Harbour defence units
from 1942 to 1943 all members of the class were exclusively used in convoy escort Duty however with the Americans beginning their invasion of the Gilbert and Marshall Islands, the remaining members of the class along with other Japanese vessels were deployed to try and stop the Americans advance, on November 29th Yomogi would be sunk by a US submarine just off the Makin Atoll, with their usefulness been called into question the remaining four members of the class would be recalled to Japan and then moved to Zipang for repair and refit, however on January 5th Zipang riots began with many members of the Zipang Armed Forces joining these riots which quickly turned into a full-scale Insurrection of the Japanese occupying government, Taka and Nire were at Heguri naval Arsenal undergoing repairs and refit when the riots began both the Destroyers Crewes joined in the riots along with the crew of the super Dreadnought battleship Heguri, with many other ships joining in on the Rebellion, by March 1944 the newly established free Zipang government open up talks with the allied powers, britain who has always been a close Ally of Zipang was quick to invite them into the allied powers and help them liberate their home from the Japanese, throughout the rest of 1944 the remaining four members of the Tsuta class would be primarily used for anti-submarine work and convoy escort Duty by 1945 all remaining pockets of Japanese resistance on Zipang were eradicated, and will the end of the war in sight, Zipang Admiralty assessing the state of the Navy and began the process of decommissioning much older vessels the however the remaining Tsuta class somehow against the odds remaining in service until the very end of the war on the 2nd of September 1945, on the 15th of December the remaining members of the class were finally decommissioned and sent to the scrapyard
Ships in class: (laid down-launched-commissioned - fate)
Tsuta (DD-80) 1918-1919-1920 - sunk on the 21st of October 1934
Kuri (DD-81) 1918-1919-1920 - sunk on the 21st of October 1934
Ashi (DD-82) 1919-1920-1921 - decommissioned on the 15th of December 1945
Hasu (DD-83) 1919-1920-1921 - sunk on the 5th of November 1934
Shiranui (DD-84) 1919-1920-1921- decommissioned on the 15th of December 1945
Kiku (DD-85) 1920-1921-1922 - sunk on the 5th of November 1934
Nire (DD-86) 1920-1921-1922 - decommissioned on the 15th of December 1945
Aoi (DD-87) 1921-1922-1923 - sunk on the 27th of November 1942
Fuji (DD-88) 1921-1922-1923 - sunk on the 21st of October 1934
Yomogi (DD-89) 1922-1923-1924 - sunk on the 27th of November 1942
Kaya (DD-90) 1922-1923-1924 - decommissioned on the 15th of December 1945
Sumire (DD-91) 1922-1923-1924 - sunk on the 5th of November 1934
Taka (DD-92) 1923-1924-1925 - decommissioned on the 15th of December 1945