Thanks for the info, Bill - and for the link, Cerberus. I've read the Model Ship World exchange with great interest. (I have a membership in that site, but I haven't really become familiar with it yet.)
I confess I have really mixed reactions to all this. I've detested Mamoli for decades; when it went under, my reaction was "good riddance." Mr. Dusek does seem determined to upgrade the quality of materials in the kits - a major improvement. And he apparently has access to a laser-cutting machine. Also good: Mamoli's die-cut parts had a reputation for not fitting right.
But he says that "at least for the time being" he intends to release the old Mamoli kits pretty much intact. He doesn't mention improving the fittings, which are notoriously bad. (I think one reason for the odd scales of Mamoli kits is that the company designed them around fittings that were already in use on other kits - and picked the scales to make them match. More or less.) And he wasn't particularly receptive to Bill's well-stated suggestion that he junk the Mamoli "HMS Beagle," which is a scandal.
The implications is that he's going to sell somewhat improved versions of the old Mamoli line initially, and try to build up some capital so he can produce some genuinely new and better kits. That's a laudable ambition - except from the standpoint of the gullible customers who buy the slightly revised old kits.
One of Mamoli's basic problems always was that the people running it didn't really understand - or care - what scale ship modeling is about. I hope we'll see a reversal of that attitude. But I'm not convinced that it will happen soon.
On the positive side, the kits in Mr. Dusek's previous venture, Dusek Models, certainly seem to have been designed by knowledgeable people. I've never seen one of them in the flesh, but the photos certainly are impressive. Maybe what used to be one of the worst of the HECEPOB firms actually will start producing genuine scale models. I hope so.
Incidentally - Bill, what's your source for saying the Bounty started out as a collier? I know Cook's Endeavour did, but in all the digging through Bounty materials I've done I haven't bumped into any references to what her cargo in the merchant service was. Hmmm....Her original name, Bethia, ought to be in Lloyd's Register of Shipping, which started publication in 1776. Sometime soon I'll try to make time to drop in the Mariners' Museum Library, which has the closest copy of Lloyd's know of, and see what I can find out.
Best of luck to Mr. Dusek.