USS SAN JACINTO
This is the Dragon 1/700 kit of USS Independence painted up as the San Jacinto,
which I chose because I preferred the colour scheme. I sweated blood and
nails over this model. I saw the words “Premium Edition” on the box and
bought it thinking that it was a state of the art new kit, and did not realise
that it was just a twenty plus year old Skywave moulding with some twiddly
gimmicks added.
As a plastic kit, it is something of a dog. The parts fit where they
touch, with big gaps where they don’t. The parts breakdown for the hull is
totally ludicrous, with separate bow and stern sections, and these give the
aforementioned big gaps that keep on opening up again. The scuttles in the
hull and superstructure are enormous, twice the size they ought to be. The
gun tubs and splinter shields suffer more than most kits from the “converging
verticals syndrome”. Bofors guns are clunky and heavy on the detail..
The kit gives an optional gimmicky transparent flight deck and non-optional
transparent upper hull sides, but at least it gives you the choice to not paint
the windows and have them apparently glazed.
I chose to lower one of the elevators and open up the hangar deck doors.
It now became evident that the parts provided for the interior of the hangar
were inaccurate. A photo-etched hangar deck is provided that is supposed
to be glued onto the main deck level of the cruiser hull. The hangar deck
was actually built about three or four feet above this deck. The part for
the forward bulkhead is intended to go in entirely the wrong place, as it would
shut off the forward elevator from the hangar proper. I therefore had to
do a lot of structural scratchbuilding to get the hangar deck looking OK, as
well as the putative detail that I was suggesting about the place.
The top deck of the island was scratchbuilt in order to lose some of the
converging verticals.
The Bofors guns, both quads and twins, were replaced with a combination of
scratchbuilding with resin copies being made, resin copies of Tamiya barrels and
White Ensign photo-etched details.
The kit provides a photo-etched mast to replace the horrible solid plastic
monstrosity, but this is the wrong pattern for the ship, so the Gold Medal set
was used, which also provided the supports for the smoke stacks and the radar
aerials.
Aircraft are a mixture of Trumpeter and Dragon, I believe.
Painting was eventually accomplished with Model Master acrylics. The
moulded on detail on the hull sides, combined with the overhanging galleries for
the AA guns, made effective masking all but impossible, and the complicated
scheme was eventually painted painstakingly by hand, with endless recoatings and
corrections.
The original kit is a sow’s ear. I don’t think I have achieved a silk
purse with it, maybe just a cheap leather wallet from a stall on the market!
All in all I was very glad to see it finished and out of the way.