I was completely unaware of the 1/200 Imai kit. There seems to be a hole in the middle of my knowledge of plastic ship model history. It appears to center right around 1980 - when I quit working in a hobby shop and got a job in a maritime museum, where I wasn't making enough money to think about buying such things. That was right around the brief heyday of Imai kits, which were some of the best ever.
I think the basic problem with the little Imai 1/350 kit is that the company used many (if not all) of the same parts to represent several ships. The series also included the
Gorch Fock, the
Sagres, and maybe one or more of the
Eagle's other near-but-not-quite sisters. I suspect the kits may have been identical except for the decal sheets. In Imai's defense, at that time (the mid-seventies) most modelers were building their
Eagles according to the incorrect Underhill plans. I rather suspect Imai used those plans for several of the kits in the 1/350 series. That would explain - partially - such things as the ancient-looking ship's boats.
I'm not sure about this point, but on the basis of the photos in the review to which rcboater linked us, it looks like the 1/350 kit
doesn't include the big modern pilothouse. There was a deckhouse at the break of the quarterdeck for quite a while, but the one in the kit appears to be an older, smaller one without the big windows in the front. It wouldn't be too hard to modify the kit, using sheet styrene. As I recall, the new pilothouse is actually a pretty simple structure - basically a steel box with windows in the front. I think it functions largely as a classroom for teaching navigation to the cadets in bad weather. As I remember, for good weather navigating there's a big, collapsible chart table on the quarterdeck outside it.
Rather remarkably, this kit does seem to have the double-spanker rig - which the real ship
didn't have in 1976. In any case, a nice little kit and a sound basis for a good scale model.
One small bit of trivia about the markings. The "Coast Guard Slash" originated during the Kennedy administration; the
Eagle got hers (to the accompaniment of quite a bit of bitter argument) a few years later. (We took this up in another Forum thread a year or so ago. It seems the subject still ignites some emotions - on both sides.) When the "slash" was added, so were the words "Coast Guard." Sometime between 1989 and 1991, at the behest of one of George Bush's Secretaries of Transportation, it was decided to add the letters "U.S." As ships and aircraft came in for repairs and got repainted, "U.S." was added - in the same Zurich Bold Extended font - to their hulls and fuselages. (I found this out when I was doing a series of drawings of CG aircraft, in 1991. A Hercules that had just been delivered to the CG Air Station in Elizabeth City had the "U.S."; older helicopters in the same hangar didn't.) There was a period when some said "U.S. Coast Guard" and some said "Coast Guard." I'm not sure exactly when the
Eagle got her "U.S." added; she certainly had it when I took pictures of her in 1994, and she has it now. The decal sheet in the Imai/Academy/Minicraft kit apparently doesn't. The good news is that if you buy two kits you can scrounge the necessary letters out of COA
ST G
UARD. (Slice up a T to make the periods.)
I once e-mailed Loren Perry, of Gold Medal Models, and suggested that he make some parts for sailing ships. He wasn't interested. He claimed he didn't know the subject well enough (I rather doubt that; he's an extremely knowledgeable man), and that his modern ship and railroad lines were keeping him more than busy enough. I wish one of the photo-etching companies would get interested in this sort of thing. The potential is there all right. On 1/350 scale photo-etched shrouds and ratlines could be pretty convincing. Some of the parts in the GMM 1/350 merchant ship or warship set would be applicable to those Imai schoolships - the handrails and ladders, for instance. But I don't think the sailing ship modeling fraternity in general has yet appreciated the potential of the medium.