Hard to say, really, LHoffman, since there are many being worked on at the same time in various stages of preparation or finish. Consider: Most of the little silver dots on the decks to represent deck guns are built up layers of pigment, so the flat surface of the sculpt is broken up with little bumps. On average, 7-10 applications of pigment make a deck gun bump, and each layer has to dry before the next one is applied. FJO has a series of pictures of the making of the Mogami cruisers, so I’ll have to get hold of those to post. Those 4 took a few weeks, but they weren’t worked on every day. And they had to wait for the Pearl Harbor versions of the Zuikaku and Shokaku to get finished. Those, I know, took a long time. The towers have been replaced, the hull was cut away under the fore and aft flight decks, both have hand drawn & painted hull illustrations port & starboard accurate to the schematics, the decks are hand painted (not decals), putty has been added to each side of the flight deck and then sculpted away to make more deck AA guns and place them accurately according to the schematic. Like I said, those took a long time. Over the coarse of 2 months at least, while other things were going on, like the Kongos getting base colors. FO called as I was typing this, so I asked about average time per ship. The answer, after some consideration of research, amount of modification, and detail, was 8-15 hours per ship, at about 5-10 hours per week. Given what’s been done and what I know of the time so far, I’d say if we had the real number of ships and time and did the math, it wouldn’t work out to the estimate. Either less hours per ship or more hours per week, I’d say.
And thanks, I think, for the compliment, Nowhere Man. Remember, ours is a 2 man project. I only get to spend an hour or three during the weekdays painting, and maybe a half-day on the weekend. So 5-10 hours per week for me. I’m doing the aircraft (mostly so we can play “Check Your 6!” with the lego flight stands I made) and FJO is doing ships (so we can use them for table top “Victory at Sea” also).