For those who assemble, they find it preferrable to spend the extra cash for a better engineered kit such as those from Tamiya, but a good old school modeler will still take on the challenge of making a silk purse from a sows ear. I've seen those old junk kits beat out higher end works of engineering art many a time. It still boils down to the modeler, not the model itself.
Truer words were never spoken Hawk... Like the guy who wants a muscle car and buys it, rather than building it... Kits like the old Monogram ones from the early 60s are among my favorites to build, especially the ones with the mummified "pilot" figure glued to a piece of armor plate which in turn is glued to the fuselage half, like their Spitfire IX, Me-109E, F4U-4, F4F, F6F, etc.... Back in the day, they ran at about 1.50 and were rushed home, slapped together with Testor's tube glue, and promptly blown up with a firecracker, lol... Then you run back up to the Five & Dime (or grocery store in my case) and buy another one, only to blow it up as well... The .39-cent HAWK 1/72 kits faired even worse, lol..
When I became a "serious" modeler at about age 13-14, that's when I got into scratchbuilding the details that were missing. There were no resin parts-kits (or VERY few) and PE parts were unheard of.. I've got several of these old gals on the bench in various stages right now, namely the TBF, Wildcat, and Lindberg's P-6E & PT-17...
I started a build-log for the Monogram TBF in here back in July 08 IIRC... Detailing the cockpits, rear crew compartment, vac-forming a new canopy & cowl and casting a new engine were some of things being done with it..
Hmmm... I really need to finish that thing...