The aircraft was very simple, being made from "non-strategic" materials (mainly wood and steel). To save weight, it was to use a jettisonable undercarriage (there was to be no landing), so a simple, welded steel tube undercarriage was attached to the aircraft. This, however, was found to give unmanageable ground-handling characteristics, so a simple
shock absorber was then incorporated. The cross section of the
fuselage was
circular and not
elliptical, as were most planes of this size and type; such a fuselage was easier to make.
Tsurugi had an instrument panel with some
flight instruments,
rudder pedals, a joystick type control column, and a place for a
radio. Flight controls included both
ailerons and
elevators and (in production versions)
flaps. The Ki-115 was designed to be able to use any engine that was in storage for ease of construction and supply and to absorb Japan's stocks of obsolete engines from the 1920s and 1930s. The initial aircraft (Ki-115a) were powered by
Nakajima Ha-35 radial engines. It is not known if any other engine was ever actually fitted. After testing, the first production aircraft were fitted with the improved undercarriage and two rocket units. These may have assisted with take-off ==Performance==