Hi MrchntMarine!
On all Revell kits for the last five or six years I wash the heck out of them .Even going so far as having a Tupperware cake storage pan for washing the parts on the sprues with Dawn and very Hot water.
Create a container of foam and parts and then let sit for a minute or two, pour out and rinse thoroughly. You should rinse in hot water twice and let air dry. You should be good to go then. I am still working on the deckhouse of my latest, just making the seams disappear.
I was thinking, I know a bad idea LOL! I noticed a small discrepancy in something I never thought to mention. In every case you must do a small modification to the stem of the ship.They have the curve going the wrong way. remember these are based on the "Victory hulls" Lengthened and turbine powered and extra cargo capacity. The Stem would be slightly concave instead of convex!
I shipped for three years on a Victory- M.S.T.S. service as Chief Engineer! They were good ships in my opinion, Yeah, I know about opinions!
I was asked to do the "Hermann Marwede" by some friends and, I HAD to wash all of them! One got to the paint stage before I noticed the paint coming off by just touching it, it would just rub off!
I always liked this kit and have done some pretty weird conversions of the Area above the main deck line. Gosh, I wish I had the photos. Some would definitely make you laugh! It's a good hull for this . By the way did you know that the U.S.S. Randall may be the same mold - Militarized?
These hulls were so neat though. Anything from Hospitals and Car Carriers al the way to full Passenger ships and Oceanographic Reasearch and Drill ships. I even did two to represent the converted Victories that became "Container" capable ships for the Alaskan Trade.
I apologise for the longwindedness, I just thought after what you said about building more than one, you'd like to know!