MikeV:
jtilley:
stikpusher:
I could swear that Revell did one many years ago in their old box scale lineup of kits. Not what would be cutting edge today, but it will look like the ship.
As a matter of fact Revell has just reissued its old Baltimore-class heavy cruiser: http://www.revell.com/model-kits/ships/85-0370.html .
Revell lists the scale as 1/481; that sounds about right.
Be warned: this is a very old kit. If I'm not mistaken it dates from about 1954. To say that it doesn't represent the current state of the art would be to understate the case seriously.
On the other hand, it does look about like the ship in question, the scale is about what MikeV had in mind, and the price, as such things go, isn't bad. (Free Time Hobbies is selling it for $15.95.)
This old kit might be just what you're looking for - for the particular purpose you have in mind. Just don't expect it to compare, in terms of accuracy and detail, with the Trumpeter kits.
Thanks for the heads up. Is this Revell kit the only larger kit out there that is less than $100?
So far as I know - yes.
I looked up the kit in Dr. Graham's book Remembering Revell Model Kits, this evening. For once my senile memory was right: the original release date was 1954. When the book was published, the estimated value of the original kit on the collectors' market was $100-120. Dr. Graham covers the period up to 1980; by then the kit had been reissued twice. The 1960 release, under the name Helena, was estimated at $35-45; the 1967 one, labeled Pittsburgh, was $40-50. I suspect some kit collectors fell on their swords when this latest reissue was announced.
In its earlier incarnations, I think, the kit came with a big sheet of decals, including numbers for the whole class. (The Helena was CA-75; the St. Paul was CA-73.)
I just took a look at some photos of the St. Paul on the Navsource site (www.navsource.org). By the time of the Korean conflict she apparently had had her catapults removed and replaced by gear for handling helicopters. I imagine there were quite a few other modifications, but that was the most obvious.
Aurora used to make a Baltimore-class cruiser on 1/600 scale with the name St. Paul on the box. It was, obviously, a little smaller than the Revell one; my vague recollection is that the level of detail may have been a bit higher - but not much. It's been off the market for many years. Aurora kits in general command pretty high prices on the collectors' market: http://www.oldmodelkits.com/index.php .
I'm completely in sympathy with your desire to build a model of your father's ship. I gave my dad a model of his attack transport, based on the ancient Revell kit, for Christmas once. I'll never forget the look on his face when he got out his bifocals and started studying it up close. Such gentlemen tend to be pretty forgiving of minor inaccuracies.
Good luck.