• Se-Ri :
Armoured recovery vehicle on a modified Type 97 chassis with a collapsible crane powered by a Type 100 240 hp
diesel engine. The winch was located over the rear deck of the engine compartment. The Se-Ri also had "external stowage ranks" on each side of the hull. A machine gun turret replaced the main gun turret used on the Type 97 Chi-Ha tank. Introduced in 1939, three were produced. • Type 97 Chi-Yu
mine flail tank :Type 97 Chi-Ha fitted with 2 revolving drums with rows of chains mounted on glacis plates and linked to the drive wheels for clearing a mine-field. The prototype copied the design of the British mine flail tanks. • Type 97 mine clearing tank GS :Type 97 Chi-Ha fitted with rocket launchers. First produced in 1943. A rocket would be launched with detonating cords affixed from its engine deck. The tank also had a rocket launcher at the rear MG position on the turret. It launched a Bangalore torpedo affixed to a rocket. • Type 97 experimental flamethrower tank number 2 :Type 97 chassis fitted with two large, elongated fuel tanks and two flamethrowers on each side of the hull. It utilized an electric flame igniter system. Not such is known about this prototype, but a U.S. military chemical weapons report with photos was produced after examination of the vehicle. An earlier version of the Type 97 experimental flamethrower tank (number 1) replaced the hull machine gun with a flamethrower. • Ho-K :An
armoured lumberjack vehicle on a modified Type 97 ShinHōtō Chi-Ha chassis and a steel prow mounted for creating paths through forests. Used in
Manchuria to aid the fight against the Soviet Union. One group was sent to
New Guinea for use in the construction of an airfield there. • Lumber sweeper Basso-Ki :A lumberjack vehicle on a modified Type 97 chassis. It was used to remove severed trees and stumps generated by the work of the Ho-K. • Shi-Ki :Command tank on a Type 97 chassis. It had a machine gun in the turret and a 37 mm gun on the hull. Recognized by its different sized turret with the rail-antenna, it had long-range communications and superior optics. "Mainly" used at the tank training schools. • Ka-So :Command tank to replace the older Type 97 Shi-Ki. It was based on the
Type 1 Chi-He and had additional radios inside its turret. A wood dummy main gun was placed in the turret so the tank did not stand out from other tanks. • Type T-G bridge layer :Type 97 with the turret removed; equipped with rollers, which support the "
bridging span carrier" over the top of the chassis. • Experimental anti-aircraft tank Ta-Ha :A planned anti-aircraft tank based on the Type 1 Chi-He chassis in 1944. The design called for the tank turret to be replaced by a rotatably mounted anti-aircraft gun in a twin mount behind a gun shield. One prototype tank was under construction at the end of the war. ==Notes==