Very very interesting project!!! And a great start!
I would highly recommend getting the Warship Pictorial 33 on her by Steve Wiper. It has the best selection of wartime Lex pics.
The Squadron at sea by David Doyle is also great, but covers this period a bit less.
The back page of the Wiper pic has the color film still which Matt linked to, and a couple of other ones. They show the flight deck color and the markings indeed. The 'LEX' is visible. The color is described by Wiper as Insignia Yellow, but I would agree with the interpretation by Vorassi on the ship camouflage page that it is light grey. To me, it certainly looks light grey in these images� Of course, it could be a very dirty white or a washed out yellow, but the result is something light grey looking, so maybe it is best to paint it like that.
Maybe it is my personal opinion, but I would strongly advise against using the Artwox deck. The front and rear (rounded down) edges of the real deck were steel, but are included integrally in the wood deck. If you use the wooden deck for these, they will have an unrealistic wood grain for steel decking, and if you cut them of (which is easy) you would have to find a way to set the rest of the deck a bit deeper to avoid a raised edge along them (which would be very hard).
Besides, the wooden deck doesn't offer any extra detail or doesn't correct anything (i.e. doesn't provide the water evacuation gutters in the real deck). The Trumpeter plastic deck is very finely engraved, and in my opinion looks more realistic than wooden deck whose texture is coarser and would look more out of scale (but this can be personal preference of course).
It also doesn't save any work, as you will have to install the plastic deck anyway before attaching the wood deck on top. Lexingtons' side plating went all the way up to the edge of the deck, while the kits' deck fits flush on top of the hull sides. For the best effect, you need to glue the plastic deck on top of the hull and then remove the seam completely (filling and sanding). The wooden deck would only give you another seam to fill� And finally, Lex's deck was painted, which is the same amount of work for wooden or plastic decks.
Steve's bridge is a huge improvement indeed though!
Now armament:
- The 20mm platforms at the stern corners were only added in april '42. You can see their absence on photo's on pages 23 (dated 5/12/41), 24 (dated early 42) and 38 (dated april 42) of the Wiper book.
- Probably you already know this, but the 20mm AA platforms in the hull side openings were added only in april '42. Earlier, all of them were boat wells, without any armament.
- The 1.1 inch guns are visible on the forward and rear platforms on photo's on pages 24 (dated early '42) and 38 (dated april '42) of the Wiper book. Earlier photo's don't show these area's clearly enough, but the Wiper book states that 'it is believed that at some time during late august '41 (during a refit at Puget) her 3 inch guns were replaced by 1.1 inch guns'. It is hard to be sure from photo's, but the 1.1 inch gun tub at the forward end of the funnel seems to be present from this time on also.
The plans mentioned by Matt are printed in the Wiper book also, but their date of 7/5/41 doesn't contradict 1.1 inch guns being present from august onwards.
- Probably you know this (as it is visible on your inspiration photo), but the 8 inch turrets had .50 AA guns on top of them (two per turret). They had railing around them, with splinter matting on that. There were plenty of splinter mats on the bridge and funnel top too.
The structure at the forward end of the funnel was the radar control room, which was installed together with the CXAM-1 radar in june or juli '42 (again according to Wiper). It's shape was very different from the conning and flight control station, and is a bit different from the kit part too. Most importantly: it didn't have any openings like the kit part does, so you need to get rid of those! This item is shown clear enough on pages 21 (your inspiration photo), 24 and 26 (the best) of the Wiper book, as well as page 98 of the Doyle book (the famous NARA pic).
The 20mm AA platform on the starboard side of the funnel was only installed in april '42. Photos on page 23 (5/12/'41) and 24 (early '42) of the Wiper book show the previous boat platform (which is shaped vary differently) to be present still.
Some more details:
- The 'wings' on the funnel top are really too wide in the kit, and are best sanded or cut much more narrow.
- The kit only provides '24 inch searchlights, while the ones on the funnel top corners were '36 inch. Anything more beefy than the kit items you can put there will look better.
- The port side of the funnel didn't have the group of vertical pipes (only Sara), so better to sand them of.
- The starboard side of the funnel didn't have the ladder near the front like the kit, but ammo lift rails near the front and rear and only a ladder near the rear.
Looking forward to the next steps! And that weathering�
Cheers!
Marijn