Japanese 61 cm torpedo

Several 61 cm (24-inch) torpedoes have been used by the Imperial Japanese Navy, particularly during the Second World War. The size category has not been used by Japan since the end of the war.

Torpedoes of caliber larger than 21-inch are uncommon, though a number of examples can be found during the 20th century, such as the German Empire's H8 (60 cm), the British Navy Mark I (24.5-inch), and the Cold War Era Soviet 65-73 and 65-76 (65 cm). Submarines and surface ships generally used 53 cm torpedoes, whereas 61 cm torpedoes were entirely in the realm of surface launch. One exception was the M-Project aerial torpedo, which actually had a diameter of 63 cm.

With the modest increase in diameter, 61 cm torpedoes had much more internal volume. This allowed for superior propulsion systems, more propellant, and a heavier warhead. Such torpedoes approached the size of midget submarines, and the Type 93 was modified into a suicide weapon - the Kaiten, a piloted version.

Prior to 6 October 1917, imperial measurements were used. After this date, metric units were used. As such, the 18-inch torpedoes were designated as 45 cm torpedoes. Japanese torpedoes have usually conformed to the 45 cm (17.7-inch or 18-inch), the 53 cm (21-inch), and the 61 cm (24-inch) calibers.

The Japanese type designation scheme has mostly used three different approaches. Units designed prior to the end of the Second World War relied on the traditional Japanese calendar and were designated by either the regnal era year or the imperial year. In 1873, the Gregorian calendar was introduced in Japan; during the latter half of the 20th century, Japan increasingly switched to using this system, and as such, more recent torpedoes have type designations denoting Gregorian years. As an example of all three systems, a torpedo designed or accepted for service in 1980 could potentially be called either a Type 55 (Showa Era year 55), a Type 40 (Imperial Year 2640), or a Type 80 (Gregorian year 1980).