Imperial Japan:
Exposed entrails of the destroyer
Harusame while in drydock on Aug 1943. The Shiratsuyu-class destroyer was torpedoed by the USN sub USS Wahoo
She was damaged on 24 January 1943 in the South Pacific, towed to Truk, had a false bow fitted, then sailed to Japan under her own power. She was repaired and returned to service by the end of the year, assigned to DesDiv 27 on 30 November and escorted
Yamashiro into Yokosuka on 30-31 December.
Battleship
Yamato underway damaged and on fire during Operation Ten-Go, 7th April
It was noticed that attacking both sides of
Musashi allowed for the flooding to actually keep the ship relatively level before going under, so in contrast the strikes on Yamato were concentrated all on the port side. Initially,
Yamato's listing was corrected by counter-flooding the starboard machinery spaces, but there's only so much that can be done while the ship was slowly getting lower in the water and losing engine power. Once the listing became noticeably uncontrollable, air group commander Herbert Houck had the torpedo running depth changed from 10' to 20' and ordered a strike on the starboard side so that more of the exposed lower hull underneath the TDS would be struck. By this point,
Yamato was listing heavily to port, had lost all steering control, and had just ordered the crew to abandon ship after it began capsizing. The magazine explosion occurred 18 minutes afterwards when the ship had pretty much already completely capsized and was going under, sealing her fate.