Large-scale ship modeling fans around the world have been anticipating this important release for some time now. I was delighted when this review copy arrived in the mail. A 1/350 scale injected kit of CV8 USS Hornet! I am pleased to report that the wait is worth it! Read on.
Background
USS Hornet (CV-8) was launched 14 December 1940 by the Newport News Ship Building & Dry Dock Co.
During the uneasy period before Pearl Harbor, Hornet trained out of Norfolk. A hint of a future mission occurred 2 February 1942 when Hornet departed Norfolk with two Army B-25 medium bombers on deck. Once at sea, the planes were launched to the surprise and amazement of Hornet's crew. Later with her own planes on the hangar deck, she loaded 16 Army B-25 bombers on the flight deck. Under the command of Lieutenant Colonel James H. Doolittle, 70 officers and 64 enlisted men reported aboard. In company of escort ships Hornet departed San Francisco 2 April and embarked on her mission under sealed orders. That afternoon Captain Mitscher informed his men of their mission: a bombing raid on Japan.
Eleven days later Hornet joined USS Enterprise (CV 2) off Midway and Task Force 16 turned toward Japan. With Enterprise providing air combat cover, Hornet was to steam deep into enemy waters where Colonel Doolittle would lead the B-25s in a daring strike on Tokyo and other important Japanese cities. Originally, the task force intended to proceed to within 400 miles of the Japanese coast; however, on the morning of 18 April 1942, a Japanese patrol boat, No. 23 Nitto Maru, sighted Hornet. The cruiser USS Nashville sank the craft which already had informed the Japanese of the presence and location of the American task force. Though some 600 miles from the Japanese coast, confirmation of the patrol boat's warning prompted Admiral William F. Halsey at 0800 to order the immediate launching of the "Tokyo Raiders." Hornet then sailed back to Pearl Harbor. Hornet's mission was kept an official secret for a year; until then President Roosevelt referred to the origin of the Tokyo raid only as "Shangri-La."
Later, on 4 June 1942, Hornet, Yorktown, and Enterprise launched strikes as the Japanese carriers struck their planes below to prepare for a second strike on Midway. Hornet dive bombers missed contact, but 15 planes comprising her Torpedo Squadron 8 found the enemy and pressed home their attacks. They were met by overwhelming fighter opposition about eight miles from three enemy carriers and followed all the way in to be shot down one by one. Ens. George H. Gay, USNR, the only surviving pilot, reached the surface as his plane sunk. He hid under a rubber seat cushion to avoid strafing and witness the greatest carrier battle in history.
Hornet planes attacked the fleeing Japanese fleet on 6 June 1942 and assisted in sinking the cruiser Mikuma, damaged a destroyer, and left the cruiser Mogami aflame and heavily damaged. Hits were also made on other ships. Hornet's attack on Mogami wrote the finish to one of the decisive battles of history that had far reaching and enduring results on the Pacific War. Midway was saved as an important base for operations into the western Pacific. Likewise saved was Hawaii. Of greatest importance was the crippling of Japan's carrier strength, a severe blow from which she never fully recovered. The four large aircraft carriers sent to the bottom of the sea carried with them some 250 planes along with a high percentage of Japan's most highly trained and battle-experienced carrier pilots. This great victory by Hornet and our other ships at Midway spelled the doom of Japan.
The Battle of Santa Cruz Island took place 26 October 1942 without contact between surface ships of the opposing forces. That morning Enterprise planes bombed carrier Zuiho. Planes from Hornet severely damaged the carrier Shokaku, and cruiser Chikuma. Two other cruisers were also attacked by Hornet aircraft. Meanwhile, Hornet, herself, was fighting off a coordinated dive bombing and torpedo plane attack which left her so severely damaged that she had to be abandoned. Commented one sailor, awaiting rescue, when asked if he planned to re-enlist, "Dammit, yes - on the new Hornet!" Captain Mason, the last man on board, climbed over the side and survivors were soon picked up by destroyers.
The abandoned Hornet, ablaze from stem to stern, refused to accept her intended fate from friends. She still floated after receiving nine torpedoes and more than 400 rounds of 5-inch shellfire from destroyers Mustin and Anderson. Japanese destroyers hastened the inevitable by firing four 24-inch torpedoes at her blazing hull. At 0135, 27 October 1942, she finally sank off the Santa Cruz Islands. Her proud name was struck from the Navy List 13 January 1943.
Hornet (CV-8) received four battle stars for World War II service. Her famed Torpedo Squadron 8 was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation "for extraordinary heroism and distinguished service beyond the call of duty" in the Battle of Midway
The Kit
This review kit arrived bagged rather than in its retail box. Most of the 15 frets and numerous large free components are molded in hard light gray styrene. One is immediately impressed with the size of this model! The waterline hull is one piece! I can't imagine the size of the tool used to create this part. The kit can be built either as a waterline representation or full hull. A one-piece waterline hull base is molded in dark red. The lower hull is likewise. I had to test fit the hull pieces and was delighted at the fit. There will be some filling and sanding here sure, but it doesn't look like much trouble.
Large Components
The flight deck is molded in three large pieces. This normally would make me cringe but dry fitting again showed good fits. Just a touch of well-masked filler would make seams disappear. I recommend masking here because all flight deck surfaces feature very fine scribed detail representing acres of tie downs, two catapults, and two of the three elevators in the raised position. The Fore flight deck includes an open elevator hole so that it can be poised whether up or down. Interestingly Trumpeter has the foremost elevator configured for this.
The hanger deck is very well represented in three large parts. The fore deck has nicely done stanchions and miniscule molded in anchor chains. These should be easy to remove and replace with better anchor chains. The middle hanger deck piece features nicely scribed floor details with two of the ship's elevators. The hanger deck should really shine with a couple of aircraft strategically parked. The afterdeck has a nicely molded gun tube and deck details.
On the Trees
Trees A and B contain most of the under flight deck ship's bulkheads, catwalks, and ladders. Surface detail features are finely scribed. Numerous portholes line the surfaces should probably be drilled out during assembly. Ship's hatches have very fine latch detail molded in! Hanger deck doors are all molded closed with nicely represented corrugated doors. One might thing they would leave a few open to show off the hanger deck.
Trees C and D contain most of the rest of the ship's bulkheads, intermediate decks, boats, elevator deck, and ships screws. The main crane is nicely represented without being overly heavy. The ships screws are nicely shaped and very usable. Catwalks have gun tubs molded in but are otherwise open to accept PE railings. Even the rudder has fine scribed panel detail!
Tree E contains parts for the ship's island. There are two large slab sided halves that are rife with surface detail. The various decks slide into the main island pieces and feature gun mount detail and nicely thin splinter shielding. The ship's masts are near scale thin and yardarms have nicely molded details one normally doesn't see in this scale.
Tree F is duplicated and contains ship's boats, gun's, and cranes. The 20mm guns are rather nice and scale thin. There are no gun shields but PE would really dress these up. The quad 1.1-inch AAA mounts and guns can be posed the open five-inch guns are well molded. The ship's boats are well molded with cockpit detail.
The Air Wing
Trees G through I contain the kit aircraft including (two each) B25 Mitchell bombers, F4F Wildcats, SBD Dauntless dive-bombers, and TBD Devastator torpedo planes. This is enough to equip Hornet for either the Tokyo or Midway actions. The trees are done in a manner I have never seen before. Each tree is an assemblage of three different color molding! The aircraft are molded in gray, undercarriage in black, and windshields are done in clear styrene. Wow! Each aircraft has very finely scribed details even to the point of representing the fabric control surfaces. These are some of the best in scale birds I have seen.
Directions
A well-done instruction booklet contains four pages of parts identification followed by 19 assembly and marking steps. Instructions in English and Chinese run through out and are very clear. One very nice touch is a folded color print showing ship and aircraft painting and details. Ship's markings are shown for both the Tokyo and Midway actions. The ship is basically done in Measure 12 modified for both actions. Gunze Mr. Color values are shown.
Decals
One decal sheet contains markings for all parts. There are two small decals for the ship name and all the rest for the aircraft. The decals are well registered and should represent early war birds quite well.
Conclusion
Going over this kit I keep flashing back and comparing it to the Banner/Trumpeter release of the Arizona last year. Let me tell you this kit is a big step up from the Arizona release. Where surface detail was near non-existent with the Arizona, it is pervasive with this kit! This beauty should build up to an impressive model right out of the box. Throw in a set of Tom's Modelworks Hornet Detail set and this should be a showstopper! We would like to thank Stevens International for providing this review sample. Highly recommended.