tucchase
BernieS:
Newbie question - is there much available in the way of detailing for models such as these - canon barrels, pulley blocks, hatch covers etc? A few years back I built HMS Hood with etched brass detailing - it made a huge difference over the moulded plastic.
Thanks again,
Bernie
OH MY!!! Is there anything available for detailing? Anything, and everything is available in nearly any scale you want! Here are a couple of the most popular places to try looking at.
http://www.modelexpo-online.com/
http://www.bluejacketinc.com/
There are many others too. I am sure others here can give a more comprehensive list!
I can endorse the two sources tucchase mentioned - but with one large caveat. To my knowledge there are no aftermarket parts specifically designed for plastic sailing ship kits.
Aircraft, armor, and modern warship modelers have the luxury of a vast range of cast metal, cast resin, turned brass, and photo-etched metal sets specifically designed for popular plastic kits: a dozen sets for a 1/48 P-51D, lord knows how many options for a 1/35 Sherman tank, two or three for a 1/350 Iowa-class battleship, etc., etc., etc. Nobody makes such things for plastic sailing ships. I once had an e-mail exchange with a manufacturer of aftermarket parts for warships, and gave him a list of sailing ship components that I thought would translate well into photo-etched metal. He very courteously gave me a list of reasons why he'd decided not to expand in that direction.
There is, however - as tucchase noted - a vast range of fittings and other components out there designed primarily for scratchbuilders and those working from wood kits. I'm a big fan of the deadeyes and blocks in the Bluejacket range; they're cast in britannia metal, and they work just as well for plastic kits as for wood ones.
Model Expo sells parts that are included in its own Model Shipways range (generally very good kits), and hundreds that are made by the HECEPOB manufacturers. (HECEPOB = Hideously Expensive Continental European Plank-On-Bulkhead. The HECEPOB manufacturers include such firms as Mamoli, Artisania Latina, Corel, Mantua, and Occre. There are exceptions, but the vast majority of their kits have little to do with the hobby of scale ship modeling. In the unlikely event that anybody's interested, a Forum search on the word "HECEPOB" will produce quite a few enthusiastic rants on the subject - from me and from others.) Some of the fittings those companies produce are ok; others are awful. ("Stern lanterns" with pink-tinted plastic in them; "carved decorations" that are grossly out of proportion, etc.)
Gun barrels can be particularly frustrating. In the world of modern warship kits you can buy beautiful turned brass barrels specifically - and accurately - designed for many, if not most, major capital ship classess in the two most popular scales: 1/350 and 1/700. If you're into sailing ships you may luck out and find barrels that will work for your model - or you may not. Bluejacket, for instance, offers nine sizes of "old style" gun barrels that would be appropriate for ships of the very late seventeenth, eighteenth, and very early nineteenth centuries. That may sound like quite a few, but a quick look establishes that only the three or four smallest ones would work for any plastic sailing ship kit on the market - and none of them would work on the small-scale kits, like the Revell 1/192 Constitution or the old Lindberg La Flore, that have been discussed earlier in this thread. The HECEPOB manufacturers' guns tend to have highly dubious proportions - and, again, to be pretty big for most plastic kits.
The good news on that particular front is that gun barrels happen to be one subject that the plastic kit manufacturers have represented pretty well over the years. The large-scale kits (the Revell 1/96 Constitution, the Heller 1/100 Victory, etc.) have barrels molded in halves, which present a problem in that the joints between them need to be dealt with (and when you're talking about fifty or a hundred gun barrels, that does amount to something). But the guns in most smaller scale plastic sailing ship kits (there are, of course, some exceptions) are generally at least as good as anything the wood kit manufacturers can offer.