According to the bible on the subject, Thomas Graham's
Remembering Revell Model Kits, this kit originally appeared in 1975 - a rough time for Revell. The company had almost given up producing serious scale models. This one, as I remember, was pretty crude. It sounds like Albert_sy2 is virtually re-doing the interior - for good reason.
The kit has an interesting and checkered history. I especially remember an ad for it that ran in several of the hobby magazines at the time. The model comes with a stand incorporating a nameplate that's shaped like a torpedo. (The nameplate is about a third as long as the sub.) For this ad some artist had done a painting of the actual U-boat charging, submerged, through the North Atlantic - with a gigantic torpedo hanging underneath. Apparently he'd worked from a photo of the completed model, and hadn't realized he was looking at a decoration rather than a replica of an actual piece of U-boat. And nobody at Revell caught it. John Steel, Jack Leynwood, and the other artists of Revell's golden age must have turned in their graves.
The kit made news a couple of years later when Revell reissued it under the name "U-505." U-505, of course, is the one that was captured by Admiral Gallery's task force and is now on exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. Revell was trying to capitalize on the fame of that boat. The only problem was that the kit represented a Type VII U-boat, and U-505 is a Type IX. (I suspect the people running Revell at that time - the ones who didn't notice the giant torpedo - genuinely didn't know there was a difference.) The scheme backfired spectacularly: when the museum started selling the kit in its gift shop, so many customers raised
that the museum lodged a complaint. Revell took the "U-505" kit off the market. That's the only instance I know of in which a falsely-advertised ship model kit has been discontinued due to public pressure. (Now, if the folks who run the
Cutty Sark had risen up in protest against the Revell "Thermopylae"....Or the descendants of Charles Darwin had gotten a whiff of Revell's alleged "H.M.S. Beagle"....Well, fantasies are good for the soul.)
The new Revell 1/72 Type VII U-boat provides vivid evidence that the company - at least in its German branch - has risen from the ashes of those days. By the way - I took a look at the Revell Germany website yesterday. Among the new releases scheduled for this year is a box of 1/72 scale Kriegsmarine figures, specially designed for use on the E-boat and U-boat kits. They'll presumably be cast in soft plastic, but a whole lot cheaper than the metal and resin crewmen now available.
Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.