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Back Dating the Revell Germany 1:570 Queen Mary (the original)

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  • Member since
    June 2006
  • From: Carmichael, CA
Back Dating the Revell Germany 1:570 Queen Mary (the original)
Posted by Carmike on Wednesday, July 19, 2006 6:56 PM

Folks:

I got a "deal" on the Revell / Germany kit of the Queen Mary I (the original) with the thought of back-dating the kit to the QM's appearance in August, 1938 when she set her best time on the Atlantic (30.99 knots westbound to NY and 31.69 knots eastbound).  Although I've seen some complaints about excess flash and broken / missing parts in RoG kits - this one is in great shape, no problems there at all.

I have a reprint of the "Ocean Liners of the Past" version of the 1936 Shipbuilder special edition on the QM and am using it as a guide.  So far, it seems as though I just need to omit the radar mast and the stabilizers.  There's no hull plating detail below the waterline (just smooth plastic) so it should be pretty easy to putty over and sand the openings for the stabilizer fins.  The kit is molded in white plastic so I'm thinking that I should prime the hull with gray before painting it black above the water-line and "Tuscan" red below a narrow white boot topping.

If anyone has experience with this kit or information about the QM's appearance in 1938 that would be very helpful.

Thanks.

  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: Greenville, NC
Posted by jtilley on Thursday, July 20, 2006 1:41 AM

That old Shipbuilder reprint is an excellent source.  About the only other major one I can suggest is the volume in the Conway/Naval Institute Press Anatomy of the Ship series, on the Queen Mary, by Ross Watton.  I suspect it's out of print, but used copies should be available.  It contains hundreds of drawings, and a pretty detailed description of the changes the ship has undergone.

Good luck.  It's a nice old kit - and a beautiful ship.

Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.

  • Member since
    June 2006
  • From: Carmichael, CA
Posted by Carmike on Monday, July 24, 2006 1:46 PM

Thank you for the reference - I was able to borrow a copy of the Anatomy of the Ship edition on the Queen Mary and it was very useful.  Good news is that other than the radar mast and the stabilizers there were few major external changes to the QM post-war.  Her major 1946/47 refit was largely oriented to restoring her interiors following the massive changes required to enable her to carry as many as 15,000 soldiers.  The only major external repair during the refit was to her bow, so it should be relatively easy to back date the kit to 1938. 

Other than the lack of detail below the waterline, Revell's tool makers did a very good job in following the blueprints and there are no major "goofs" that I have found.  Like any kit, there seem to be some areas (including the mating of the bridge structure to the rest of the superstructure) that may need some careful work.  One of the "throwback" features of the QM compared to the Normandie and the Queen Elizabeth, is the use of external stays on the funnels and my first thought is that stretched sprue may be the way to go here but will glady take any suggestions from folks who have worked in 1:570 and 1:600.

Interestingly, I found a source (The Last Atlantic Liners by William H. Miller, Vanwell Publishing Ltd.) that reports that the Queen Elizabeth (with essentially the same turbines, but with fewer boilers) reached 36.25 knots for a brief time during the war.  It makes you wonder if Cunard might have been able to coax a faster passage out of the QM after the war, but I guess they saw no point in competing with their own record and once the SS United States captured the record in 1952, it was out of reach.   

Will post some pictures as I get underway (probably next week when it cools off a bit here).

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