Mitsubishi based the tank on their
Type 98 Ke-Ni light tank. The weight was reduced to 2.9 tons from 7.2 tons and the crew was brought down from 3 to 2. A single mockup of a prototype tank was built and named the "Special number 3 light tank Ku-Ro". The commander sat in the turret and acted as both gunner and loader. The driver's position was located in the chassis. The turret was rear-mounted and housed the tank's only weapon, a
Type 100 37 mm tank gun, the same used by the Ke-Ni. There was no coaxial or hull mounted machine gun. There were plans to mount either a flamethrower or 7.7 mm
Type 97 machine gun in place of the tank's 37 mm gun.
Glider The glider developed for the Ku-Ro was the
Maeda Ku-6 a 700 kg
twin boom craft, which was specially designed to fit the tank. It was designed by The Aeronautical Institute of the Imperial University in
Tokyo. It was designed with all the requirements that the Army's Troop Transport Command needed. When mounted in the Ku-6 glider, the Ku-Ro had a wingspan of 22 m, a length of 12.8 m and a total weight of 4.2 tons. The glider was designed to be towed behind a
Mitsubishi Ki-21 medium bomber. The
tracks of the tank were unable to match Ki-21's take-off and landing speeds and since taking-off and landing would cause a great amount of damage from friction to the tracks, a pair of detachable
skis were made part of the glider. The glider, after being launched and landing could quickly be disassembled and removed from the Ku-Ro tank.
Specifications ==Project fate==