Yup... And another thing model producers SHOULD realise, is that most of these dreadnoughts had a number of sisterships (usually four ships per class on both the British and German fleets), which should translate into lots of 'different' models that are essentially the same, but in different boxes.... And there are a lot more classes in WW1 for battleships and battlecruisers than WW2 (and armored cruisers, and submarines, and submarine cruisers, and cruisers, and destroyers, etc, etc, etc....). As a lot of these ships are a fair bit smaller than those of WW2 (average battleship size is about 600' in WW1, vs 700'+ for WW2), it might almost make sense to produce some of these in a larger scale, say 1/250. But 1/350 is very fine too, and allows good comparisons with the WW2 ships....