| Date of Review |
March 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
USS Kearsarge |
| Scale |
1/96 |
| Kit Number |
5603 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
N/A |
| Pros |
Relatively clean redo of the original
kit from 1961, now provides double figure set and two kinds
of chain |
| Cons |
Some modelers will balk at paying 1200%
markup over 1961 prices (BUT beats the eBay alternative!);
new instructions are awful in regards to painting |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$89.99 |
I can recall the circumstances surrounding getting several
very big and very unique Revell kits when I was a kid. I got
the CSS Alabama as a reward for spending an entire Sunday cleaning
up after a fire in a department store, and got the "coffee
can" Space Station for moving from elementary school to
junior high in 1960. The USS Kearsarge was one I did not get
so lightly, and after finding one at the local department store
(where as family we got a 33% discount on toys and models)
I decided to earn the money for it.
My grandmother was more or less a "soft touch" and
would give us small jobs to do around her house for a few bucks,
but my grandfather was Alsatian German and would not put up
with anything short of a full day's work. It took me a good
six weeks to earn enough to buy the last remaining Kearsarge
for a then princely sum of $6.65 so I was thrilled the day
I got it. I put it together over the rest of the summer, but
alas, the next year I dropped it and could never get it to
look quite the same. After stripping off all of the "good
bits" it went down in a local pond under a hailstorm of
fire from a Daisy Model 111. I still have a few of them even
after 42 years.
Needless to say I remember this kit fondly, and was delighted
when Revell re-released the Alabama . But shortly thereafter,
the word went out on numerous websites that the Kearsarge would
not be joining it. Even the unofficial Revell biography ("Remembering
Revell Model Kits" by Thomas Graham, Schiffer Publishing
2002) notes that in 1962 the same molds were used. But others
indicated that the Kearsarge molds were modified to create
the Alabama kit (and the reworking tooling can still be seen
if you look closely inside the hull) and thus the Kearsarge
was no more. As a result, prices for an unbuilt Kearsarge
skyrocketed over the years, with some kits demanding well over
$300 on the Internet. Even one half-build and rather gluey
mess I saw about a year ago in a hobby shop went on consignment
for $95.
Happily, Revell of Germany has now solved the problem and
re-released the Kearsarge. I have heard several stories as
to how they did this (one being they duplicated and then re-re-cut
the Alabama molds, so there is now a set of each one in existence)
but the result is the same, and other than some flash on this
kit it looks very much the same as the original.
Now there are some differences to this kit, such as
the fact that the number of parts and colors of plastic have
changed and the hull no longer comes pre-coppered. Whereas
the original kit came in four colors – black for the
hull and metal work items (e.g. guns, anchors and stacks),
white figures and mast details, reddish brown wooden parts,
and a yellowish tan color for the decks and boat details, now
it comes with only the hull halves in black, the figures in
white, and the rest in the reddish brown color styrene. Also,
the directions have been redone (were the originals lost?)
in the rather insipid "point and stick" style of
all other Revellogram kits, one thing I have never found very
impressive. (One thing Revell seems to have forgotten is that
many of us learned the basics of machines from their directions
as all parts were called out by number AND name –makes
it easy to remember which is the main, mizzen and foremast,
and which yards are which. Very helpful when you're 13 and
a lot more when you're 56!)
The parts come oddly bagged, with the hull haves doubled
bagged in a separate insert that fits into a diagonal shelf
inside the box. (Which is about 15 x 36 x 5, not a small object!)
The rest of the parts are below the insert and all but the
former yellow tan parts are in one big bag; those parts (e.g.
the decks, boat floors, and some upper masts and yards) are
in a separate bag inside the big bag. The thread and ratlines,
as well as the two types of chain, are inside another separate
bag.
I had forgotten how much different from the Alabama this
kit was. Alabama's parts breakdown looked like this: 653 parts
(2 in black styrene, 20 in creme styrene, 41 in white styrene,
570 in dark grey styrene, 10 vacuformed off-white sails, 6
pre-formed ratlines/shrouds, 1 section coarse brass chain,
1 section fine brass chain, 1 spool black cotton thread, 1
spool tan cotton thread, paper flag sheet. Revelll of Germany
have faithfully fixed all of the changes, and the extra boats,
foredeck, ladders, four-bladed screw, upper masts and yards,
and foredeck gun are all back. Some have some more flash that
perhaps they did back in 1961, but the kit is all there and
looks good.
But overall the instructions are the kit's weak spot, as they
are very hard to read and find the color flags for the various
parts of the ship, and that lets it down. The boxtop art appears
correct for the Civil War paint job on the ship (and matches
the 1961 version of the kit) but the ones in this kit appear
to be from a later date. Admittedly, at least one website notes
the Kearsarge kit was done
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