Armchair Sailor - your interest is flattering. The Bounty is an extensively modified Revell kit; seven pieces of the original (not counting the crew figures) found their way into the model. I finished it in 1977, having worked on it for a little over two years.
The Hancock is my only scratchbuilt model. It's built on the "plank-on-hollowed-out-solid" system, the basic hull being carved from basswood "lifts" and the planking made from strip styrene. (That method worked fine, but I'm not sure I'd use it again. It doesn't offer any particular advantage over wood planks.) I worked on that one from 1978 through 1984 - about three years on the hull and decks, and another three on the spars and rigging. Those figures are misleading, though. I built those two when I was in grad school and getting my professional career off the ground. The Hancock went through two changes of residence, and there were periods of several months at a stretch when I didn't touch it. Its hull (before the masts went up) also made a trip to England in a suitcase, while I was doing dissertation research.
The Phantom is a somewhat-modified Model Shipways kit. For a few years the company was selling a version of it with a cast resin hull, and I was curious to see how that system would work. I think it has great potential, though that particular example had some significant errors. I see MS is now selling the kit with a machine-carved wood hull.
I've built quite a few 1/700 and 1/720 warships, beginning when the first ones appeared back in the seventies. (I was working in a hobby shop at the time; I remember being downright overjoyed at the opportunity to build a Japanese ship other than the Yamato for the first time.) The ones I have now (various others didn't survive the various moves) aren't very numerous: the Italeri H.M.S. Hood and Graf Spee, the Tamiya Yahagi, and a Skywave American destroyer escort. I think they're all excellent kits; the Italeri German pocket battleships, in my opinion, haven't received anything like the attention in the modeling press that they deserve. Like so many other ship modelers, I've got a closet full of kits waiting for my attention; realistically, I rather doubt that I'll ever build anywhere near all of them. I don't think my 1/700-scale efforts are worth showing off here, but I've gotten quite a bit of pleasure and knowledge from building them.
I've got two current projects. The long-term one is a scratchbuilt model of the American extreme clipper ship Young America, based on the superb plans by Hornsby and Crothers. I won't speculate on when - if ever - that one will be finished. The short-term project is a 1/96 Golden Hind, based on the old 1965-vintage Revell kit. I wasn't sure after the Bounty that I ever wanted to do another plastic sailing ship, but when our good Forum friend Big Jake made this kit available I couldn't resist. It's one of the best ever. I'm hoping to get it done by the end of the summer or shortly thereafter - but I'm notoriously lousy at making time estimates. To my notion, one of the great things about a hobby is that it doesn't involve time pressure and deadlines. That's one of the reasons I've never had much inclination to build models professionally.
Youth, talent, hard work, and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery.