On the subject of the model's size, an injection-moulded 1/144 Arizona is definitely practical with today's moulding technology; Nichimo's 1/200 Yamato, first produced in the 1970s (which has a single-piece hull) is actually a bit larger, at 132cm long (AZ in 1/144 would be 129cm).
A quote from Steelnavy, which confirms that the model at the show is definitely a scratchbuilt mockup, not a test shot:
The model on display is a prototype built by Richard Melillo (www.themodelersart.com). In other words, this is not a built version of an early tooling (i.e., this model had wood deck planking, the finished version will not). According to the guys from Lindberg that I talked to (Charlie & Ernie), the model will not be available until at least late 2010 or 2011, because they have not started the tooling process yet." |
|
Tracy White also mentioned on the steelnavy.com forum that the model appeared to have been built from an out of date and inaccurate set of plans:
Richard modeled the ship based on the Floating Drydock plans, which contain errors he faithfully replicated. ... The Floating Drydock plans were based on what Arizona would have looked like post-refit; the refit she was supposed to leave for the week following the attack. |
|
Anyway, I'll reserve judgment on this model until I see some actual kit parts/test shots. But if the kit's issues are limited to "fit" inaccuracies - wrong AA guns, radar, etc. - as appears to be the case on the mockup, at least these will be fairly straightforward to fix with scratchbuilding (unlike the fundamental shape errors in the I-53 kit). Especially in the case of the never-fitted radar and light AA, which you can simply leave off.
I certainly hope Lindberg get it right, though!