After reading the other "Leading the Revell horse to water but it won't take a drink" postings I have given up on the folks at Revell as to correcting its older kits in todays market place. And as for the hope of offering to the model community a line of new sailing ships or ocean liners forget it. If you want to grab the big American bucks the kit has to have a gun some where on the sprue. This is a fact. Compare the number of commercial ship models on the market to new model warship kit releases. New Bismarks, Hoods, Yamatos, Iowa class battleships etc., seem to sprout up like perenial flowers without any need to test the market place. Got a torpedo tube or gun turret on the hull? If so, you've got a profit maker. Just offer it in a new scale, some one will buy it....
My suggestion to Revell of Europe is think global, "out side the same old warship in another scale box" . How about a 1:72 American WWII destroyer escort?
The old Flower Class Corvette (Ex Matchbox) kit has been around since 1980 and despite it's ancient kit quality (throw everything out just use the hull and superstrcture) it's been in production for thirty years and folks keep purchasing it, must be a profit in there somewhere. Some builders do a great job with this kit, it has a lot of followers.
Consider the DE was a WWII "hero" it would have appeal to the WWII crowd. PLUS it saw service with the Royal Navy, France, Greece, Italy, Japan, Korea, Philipine, Portugal, Holland and Thailand Navies. What a marketing bonus, I'm sure the ship builders around the world would be interested in a new larger kit of a famous WARSHIP. Plus the USCG fielded the Edsall class in the 1950's, same armament, trading navy gray for white paint.
The only difficult part would be in choosing what hull to model: Buckley, Edsall, perhaps the Butler Class???
Even the R/C builders would like be interested in a kit this size, another group of perspective buyers. I base this on the number of Revell corvettes in magazine "how to adapt the Flower class corvette to pond sailing so it won't sink" articles since the early 1980's.
Heck the "Best of Show" at the plastic Nationals went to a rusty version of the corvette old kit (a well deserved award in my opinion).
So come on Revell of Europe , take a chance and make a buck in the process. The Revell clan here in the States are hide bound to keep churning out the same old 1950's era dreck. I don't hold any hope of innovation on this side of the Atlantic.
If not Revell, perhaps those ambitious folks over in Asia know a sure thing when they see it.