"Tsesarevich" in May 1899, when the French Toulon shipyard began building. The huge battleship is built according to the latest ship standard: a design standard displacement of 12,912 tons, 20 coal-fired boilers, a power of 16,500 horsepower, a maximum speed of about 18, and a rather shocking four-door 304mm gun. All in all, its beautiful appearance combined with its first-class firepower and protection is indeed worthy of the crown prince of higher-status warships.
In 1903, " Tsesarevich " was completed and joined the tsarist Russia a Pacific Squadron as flagship.
During the Russo-Japanese naval battle, "Crown Prince", hit the Japanese battleship "Mikasa". Subsequent damage forced the back of Jiaozhou Bay
In 1914, with the outbreak of World War I battles, “Tsesarevich" became the mainstay of the Russian Navy in the Baltic Sea.
The main position is the more advanced "Petropavlovsk" alternative. Prince No. shipyard refurbishment was bound by the command and then "Prince" was used in the Baltic Sea with the German deal.
The interim government, after the fall, incorporated it into the Soviet Red Navy. The "Tsesarevich" is technically obsolete; it has not been fully restored, and the Soviet government does not take any, so this "lonely prince" has been alone, quietly moored in the bay. 1925 out of the Red Navy active duty, then to be sold is split into small pieces melted down.
- Scale: 1/350
- Item Type: Static Kit
- Model Brief Length: 338.6 mm, Beam: 66.4 mm
- Total Parts: 390+
- Photo Etched Parts: 5 Pieces
- Total Sprues: 11 sprues
- Released Date: 2014-06
- More Features:
- Hull
- Hull is split into two parts
- Deck wood pattern, finely rendered
- Hull is split into two parts
- Stand
- contains display stand and engraved name plate
- Photo-Etched parts
- photo-etched parts included
- Hull