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USS Franklin (CV-13) (1944)

Essex-class Aircraft Carrier · World War II
Trumpeter · 05730 · 1/700 · 2006
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USS Franklin (CV-13) (1944)
USS Franklin (CV-13) (1944)
Regular price
£28.99
Sale price
£26.09/ea
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Regular price
£28.99
Sale price
£26.09/ea
£0.00

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Plastic model kit

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This boxed set contains:

  • 1 x USS Franklin (CV-13) (1944) 1/700 scale essex-class aircraft carrier
1:
United States Navy
USS Franklin (CV-13) (1944)
United States Navy

Length overall: 265.8m Beam max: 44.9m Displacement standard: 27100t Full load: 36380t During World War II the United States built three types of aircraft carriers, the Essex class heavy carriers, the Independence class light carriers, and “escort” carriers. The 24 ships of the Essex class were not remarkable for any great design innovation, but essentially for being in right place at right time, and for doing well the task history gave them. The Essex class carriers served in numbers too large, and too late in the war to gain the fame of the prewar carriers whose names they frequently bore, but they served longer than any other class, and through wars never dreamed of by their builders. Those that survive as museum ship today are a fitting tribute to the class that ruled the Pacific fifty years ago.

This boxed set contains:

  • 1*USS Franklin (CV-13) (1944) 1/700 scale essex-class aircraft carrier

Length overall: 265.8m Beam max: 44.9m Displacement standard: 27100t Full load: 36380t During World War II the United States built three types of aircraft carriers, the Essex class heavy carriers, the Independence class light carriers, and “escort” carriers. The 24 ships of the Essex class were not remarkable for any great design innovation, but essentially for being in right place at right time, and for doing well the task history gave them. The Essex class carriers served in numbers too large, and too late in the war to gain the fame of the prewar carriers whose names they frequently bore, but they served longer than any other class, and through wars never dreamed of by their builders. Those that survive as museum ship today are a fitting tribute to the class that ruled the Pacific fifty years ago.

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