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==Historical Note==
==Historical Note==
Designed as a seagoing submarine tender, with floatplane facilities for scouting purposes, Taigei entered service in 1934. She was built with very high freeboard, and shallow draught which meant she was a very poor seaboat, and this, added to her extensively welded construction, which proved very defective, meant that she was a most unsatisfactory and unsuccessful ship. In 1941, she was rebuilt and re-entered service as the light fleet carrier Ryuuhou. Her diesel engines were replaced with destroyer turbines to giver her higher speed, but she still remained a very unsuccessful conversion of an already unsuccessful design. Her weak hull, and poor internal sub-division severely limited her usefulness and she saw little frontline service, although she was damaged in the Battle of the Philippine sea before being much more seriously damaged in Kure on 19 march 1945 by US carrier planes. She was eventually scrapped in 1946.
Designed as a seagoing submarine tender, with floatplane facilities for scouting purposes, Taigei entered service in 1934. She was built with very high freeboard, and shallow draught which meant she was a very poor seaboat, and this, added to her extensively welded construction, which proved very defective, meant that she was a most unsatisfactory and unsuccessful ship. In 1941, she was rebuilt and re-entered service as the light fleet carrier Ryuuhou. Her diesel engines were replaced with destroyer turbines to give her higher speed, but she still remained a very unsuccessful conversion of an already unsuccessful design. Her weak hull, and poor internal sub-division severely limited her usefulness and she saw little frontline service, although she was damaged in the Battle of the Philippine sea before being much more seriously damaged in Kure on 19 march 1945 by US carrier planes. She was eventually scrapped in 1946.
==See Also==
==See Also==