If I remember, the Imai sailing ship kits appeared over a relatively brief span (three or four years) in the very late seventies and early eighties. That period coincides with a gap in my familiarity with the plastic sailing ship market. (I was devoting most of my model building time to my scratchbuilt Hancock, and as a starving student - and later an even more seriously starving museum curator - I didn't have the money to buy many kits.) I can only remember buying the 1/125 Cutty Sark and a few of the 1/350 school ships. My recollections of the whole line are even less reliable than most of my recollections.
That said, I certainly don't remember an Imai Victory (apart from that bizarre metal-hulled one.) I remember a couple of sail/steam-powered ships, the Susquehanna and the Napoleon, but no traditional sailing warships. I may be mistaken about that, though.
The legitimate plastic Victory kits I can remember are (1) the big Heller one, (2) the 18" (or thereabouts) Airfix one, (3) the little 6" (or thereabouts) Airfix one (which I think may have made an appearance as a "ship in a bottle"), and (4) the Revell one. I seem to recall a few others that were on the market briefly. UPC, I believe, offered one that was on the same scale as the Revell version. The parts were interchangeable with Revell's, but the detail was a little cruder. (Sort of like the Academy and Tamiya 1/350 versions of the Bismarck. UPC, like Academy, functioned primarily as a distributer of kits from East Asia.)
And I think Lindberg made two. One was part of a small series of with hull lengths of about 8", which pretty clearly were reduced scale pirated versions of larger Revell kits. (The others in the series, as I remember, were the Santa Maria, Flying Cloud, and Bounty. The Flying Cloud even had Revell-style rope coils molded into its deck.) The freakish thing about that particular Victory was that some great genius in the design department, perhaps wanting to make the kit's Revell origins less conspicuous, managed to leave off the lower row of windows in the transom and quarter galleries. (I remember sawing off the lower part of the hull, including the lower gundeck, in an effort to make the thing look like a 74-gun ship. Not much success.) And I think - but I'm by no means certain - that Lindberg also made a tiny Victory, with a hull length of about 3". That one was in another series (I recall that it also included a Cutty Sark) that was molded in "imitation bronze" - i.e., a strange green plastic with metallic gold swirls in it.
That makes seven plastic Victory kits. Maybe some other Forum member knows of more.
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