I loved those Imai "Operation Sail" kits. They represented a
great percentage of the large ships that participated in the sailing
ship get-together on the Atlantic in - was it '76 or '77?
First, it's odd that Cutty Sark has appeared with the line - she wasn't
part of the original dozen kits. The Cutty Sark is a valid
clipper ship model (in this tiny scale, and to my eye; not necessarily
to Prof Tilley's standards, I guess), but the rest were all real sail
training ships of the late 1970s. I'm pretty sure that the
original clump of Operation Sail ships were waterline models
only. Later, when Cutty Sark appeared, she had a hull bottom
option, and the later releases of the Eagle also had a lower hull half,
I believe.
Harold Underhill's "Sail Training and Cadet Ships" is
a great aid for studying these ships. David MacGregor's "Square
Rigged Sailing Ships" was very nice with great photos, but nothing like
the copious drawings in Underhill's book.
I do not believe Dar Pomoza was one of the kits released.
They took advantage wherever possible of sister ships that could re-use models.
From memory -
The Spanish Juan Sebastian de Elcano shared molds with the ?Argentinian
Esmerelda, and I think the sisters' hulls were different by 20 odd feet
in length.
Amerigo Vespucci, Winston Churchill and Danmark were the only one-offs, I think.
The following shared molds - Eagle, Sagres, Tovarisch II and Gorch
Foch. (They blew an opportunity to also kit the Romanian Mircea,
another near sister built in 1938). The real ship's hulls ranged
from 203' length (Tovarisch II) to 293' (Sagres), with no two the same,
but a standard 39' beam. The rigs were similar except for
different arrangements of sails and handling gear on the mizzen.
Nippon Maru and Kaiwo Maru shared molds.
That's eleven - weren't there a dozen? I still have them tucked
away - they're going to make beautiful models when I finally get around
to building them.
Thanks for letting me muse a bit.
Rick