Haijun watcher wrote:Is the Trumpeter Littorio kit merely a re-box of the Trumpeter Vittorio Veneto kit? So any upgrades in Littorio's AA suite after Taranto wouldn't really be shown in the 1941 kit?
I'm asking this question to see whether if the Littorio 1941 kit can be built out of box and painted as 1940 if not a lot of backdating has to be done.
Main differences between twins are directors. You can see, that they are different in the kits.
mpgl62 wrote:
Which ship do you want? And what date?
Thanks for your feedback. Muchas Gracias!
I haven't decided yet, but I am mulling/considering either painting my Littorio kit in either March 1942 colours (2nd Sirte battle camo) or maybe even a pre-Taranto 1940 raid paint scheme.
Last edited by Haijun watcher on Wed Jul 23, 2014 11:14 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Haijun" means "navy" in Mandarin Chinese.
"You have enemies? Good. It means you stood up for something in your life."- Winston Churchill
mpgl62 wrote:
Which ship do you want? And what date?
Thanks for your feedback. Muchas Gracias!
I have decided yet, but I am mulling/considering either painting my Littorio kit in either March 1942 colours (2nd Sirte battle camo) or maybe even a pre-Taranto 1940 raid paint scheme.
Note, that the extreme windows of admiral's bridge are delete and the bridge seems open. The compass bridge was open later. Also note the wind deflectors.
I have a doubt because in this picture just before Punta Stilo "La bandiera di Combattimento" (combat flag) seems that it was in the stern. Some minutes before of weighing anchor.
This might be the wrong place to post this, but I thought I'd take a shot anyways. Everyone's seen the pic of the Roma wreck's AA gun. Anyone know how much of the ship was found, or any other info?
Hello dear modellers. I'm going to start Trumpeter Roma build, but have some doubts about which book to buy as a reference. Need to decide between next two books: "The Littorio Class: Italy's Last and Largest Battleships 1937-1948" and "Warship Pictorial 37 RM Roma Reference Book". I understand that the first one is normal book with lot of text information and that the second one more like album with photos and drawings, but actually I need more visual references than history of the ship and so on. Could you please reccomend - which one of those two books contain more useful pictures, drawings and so on? Or may be anybody can reccomend anything else?
I would suggest the first one, but I may be biased as I know one of the authors
I think both are useful references, with the first one you get a valuable book with a complete oversight of the whole class too and it should be as rich in images as the Warship Pictorial. If you need reference for Roma alone, and you aren't that interested about history and technology, then the Warship Pictorial should suit you fine.
I don't think I can recommed anything else as the only other reference avaiable are the old volumes from the Orizzonte Mare series, which I have; it's a very fine overall reference but it's out of print since the 70's and in Italian only
I can see your old post below about Littorio's deck stripes during Operation Vigorous in June 1942. I was wondering, what type of camouflage did Littorio have on her sides on superstructure during Vigorous? Was it the same camo she wore during the 2nd Battle of Sirte? Or the other camo she used in 1943 with more wavy stripes?
Giampiero wrote:Scheme Stripes bow and stern Littorio
The Pe Littorio e Veneto in production
"Haijun" means "navy" in Mandarin Chinese.
"You have enemies? Good. It means you stood up for something in your life."- Winston Churchill
I also have more questions, this time about Roma- at her trials/commissioning in 1942, did she sport both the light grey paint scheme with the red and white deck stripes? Or was it just a plain deck? Just wanted to confirm if it's correctly to interpret what I saw in the picture description below.
If she had red stripes with a plain light grey hull, how long did she keep this scheme before she was painted in her final splinter camo paint scheme?
Thanks in advance.
Giampiero wrote:
"Haijun" means "navy" in Mandarin Chinese.
"You have enemies? Good. It means you stood up for something in your life."- Winston Churchill
Haijun watcher wrote:Hello Giampiero or any other expert here,
I can see your old post below about Littorio's deck stripes during Operation Vigorous in June 1942. I was wondering, what type of camouflage did Littorio have on her sides on superstructure during Vigorous? Was it the same camo she wore during the 2nd Battle of Sirte? Or the other camo she used in 1943 with more wavy stripes?
Giampiero wrote:Scheme Stripes bow and stern Littorio
The Pe Littorio e Veneto in production
Hello
I think that she has the "later war" scheme.
It is possible, that stern (and bow) was white according a more clear version of th picture. But the sun is hight and picture has too much contrast.
A detail about the bridge. In 1942 she has lost the extreme windows of admiral and compas bridge. Early war, the extremes were enclosed but they were open in 1942 and later. I think without doors or bulkheads.
Last edited by mpgl62 on Sun Mar 01, 2015 11:08 am, edited 2 times in total.
Haijun watcher wrote:I also have more questions, this time about Roma- at her trials/commissioning in 1942, did she sport both the light grey paint scheme with the red and white deck stripes? Or was it just a plain deck? Just wanted to confirm if it's correctly to interpret what I saw in the picture description below.
If she had red stripes with a plain light grey hull, how long did she keep this scheme before she was painted in her final splinter camo paint scheme?
Thanks in advance.
Giampiero wrote:
Acording the book of Bagnasco on late July 42 she has the three colors scheme and presumably the stripes.
In June 14 was the handover to the Navy. She was plain grey. I suppose that the stripes were painte in may 42 when she made tests at sea in civil hands.
Haijun watcher wrote:Hello Giampiero or any other expert here,
I can see your old post below about Littorio's deck stripes during Operation Vigorous in June 1942. I was wondering, what type of camouflage did Littorio have on her sides on superstructure during Vigorous? Was it the same camo she wore during the 2nd Battle of Sirte? Or the other camo she used in 1943 with more wavy stripes?
Giampiero wrote:Scheme Stripes bow and stern Littorio
The Pe Littorio e Veneto in production
Hello
The camouflage during Operation Vigorous in June 1942. is with strips wavy hull and superstructure
Haijun watcher wrote:I also have more questions, this time about Roma- at her trials/commissioning in 1942, did she sport both the light grey paint scheme with the red and white deck stripes? Or was it just a plain deck? Just wanted to confirm if it's correctly to interpret what I saw in the picture description below.
If she had red stripes with a plain light grey hull, how long did she keep this scheme before she was painted in her final splinter camo paint scheme?
Thanks in advance.
Giampiero wrote:
I used this design only to draw the scheme stripes .
I forgot who or where in this subject thread stated it, but the bollards on the Roma should all be painted black, concluding the ones on the bow where the aerial recognition stripes are?