My last 2 major (unfinished) forum projects did not weather the move too well:

...The Bismarck got dropped and the Gato is missing a big piece of deck grating. Anyway, I've decided it would be a great time to just start fresh, so I'm putting aside my past projects for now, applying the lessons learned and am diving into the Trumpeter Missouri + Pontos set with all I've got.
My first task was to assess what Trumpy gave us so I bought a couple of plan sets from the Floating Drydock for both the Missouri and the Iowa. I got seriously scared when I compared the kit pieces to the Iowa deck plans... nothing matched up. The Missouri plans were an entirely different story; virtually everything above the waterline was a nearly perfect match (bear in mind the plans are 1/192 scale and somewhat larger because of it):





Even the much discussed bottom of the ship is really close... basically all except for the area around the hull skegs and outer propshafts. I'm not sure if the 'Mo and the Iowa were that different or if I've got a bad set of plans, but since I've got everything I need to do an obsessive 'Mo, I've abandoned my earlier plans to do a 1945 Iowa and am going to stick with the Missouri.
I made a few reverse hull cross-sections to help visualize what's wrong...
the first 7 or 8 sections are pretty close; they stack neatly over the stern:

But then this happens (Section locations are approximate and not measured out, FYI):




Anyway, my assessment is that fixing the bottom would be best done by cutting out that entire section below the waterline, throwing it in the garbage and then rebuilding that section from scratch using the plans and inserting it onto the kit.
Wow, that would be a lot of work!
But I don't want to just ignore it or online rivet counters will point their fingers and laugh at me from their high towers in model hell
Plan "B" is to do a waterline model, as everything above the waterline passes the "close enough for Jason" test shapewise.
So I've been indecisive for long enough and am getting model ship withdrawls... time to start. Tonight I glued the hull and deck together.

Taking a lesson from the Bismarck, I added some extra support to the crossbraces just in case I do the waterline option:

They wouldn't do any good otherwise, as the bases they are attached to would be cut off and they will not stay attached to the inside of the hull otherwise.
I pinned the bow section to the hull with solid evergreen round stock to offer extra strength should the bow get wacked or dropped or have to go through another move someday.

It's probably bordering on paranoid but it will give me some added insurance for little effort and make sure the seam never reappears after putty and sanding.
I have narrowed my timeframe for the 'Mo down to two options: 1944 around her shakedown cruise or 1945 just before the surrender ceremony. If I go waterline, I'll do a seascape and really push for as much realism as possible. If I do a full hull, she'll be more along the lines of a builder's model on a nice wood display base.
And so it begins...


















