I must say that while I was pleased by the first look of the Trumpeter kits, most of them are a mixed bag IMO. The detail is state-of the art but I love a fine hull shape - and this is where their kits make me scratch my head....
The Hornet has hull lines so completely incorrect that I decided to stay away from the 1/350 and 1/700 kits (the smaller ones are usually just scaled down from the bigger ones). Revell´s old 1/489ish kit is crude but has a MUCH better hull. If you compare the hull pieces it looks like an Iowa next to a Liberty ship, they have nothing in common.
The Essex class ships look better but are also incorrect in hull shape - not very noticeable when built waterline, though. In 1/700 I´d say that the Dragon kit will be an easier build but both seem very detailed.
Lexington/Saratoga´s hulls look surprisingly accurate, but I just cannot stop wondering why a kit has so many parts and still looks kinda plain after assembly.
Even the Nimitz has an incorrect underwater ship, at least the forward section isn´t sharp enough and the bilge keels do not follow the hull shape as they are supposed to. Sometimes I wonder if they actually use any plans for research at Trumpeter.
It is just my two cents and I may seem harsh but IMO a decent looking hull ist the base for a good kit - thousands of tiny parts or multi-part aircraft cannot make up for a bad hull shape and the majority of the Trumpeter releases does fail in that department. I admit that if you build waterline, the problem is far less evident, but still, I´m not overly impressed by what Trumpeter has come up with yet.