Yes, Round 2 has been developing a 1:350 scale Klingon K’t’inga as featured in STAR TREK: The Motion Picture! This is one of the kits we have been asked about since Round 2 got into the model kit business 10 years ago. Rumor and/or speculation has been that development of this kit started back at Playing Mantis before Polar Lights was obtained by RC2, but I’ve found little to no record of that in the development notes I’ve encountered in my role as the chief sci-fi kit product developer here at Round 2. We have been working with Charles Adams for well over a year now on this project. He has supplied the CAD model for the basis of the ship. Steve Neisen is also consulting on the add-on model kit bits that were used on the original filming miniature. Jim Small is also involved in the development and will be building our publicity model. I have been discussing with Charles the possibility of writing some guest blog entries about the ship to share some of his years-long research into the model.
The photos show the mockup (prototype) of the kit and it needs a little bit of explaining. The factory has been working over Charles’ CAD work and adding details that he would have supplied as model kit parts on his own studio scale model. We sent kit parts to the factory to scan. In some instances they used scans and in some cases, they tried to rebuild them from measurements. In some cases you can’t tell the difference. In some cases you can. Our partner factory in China recently took their annual holiday for Chinese New Year and did their best to get the mockup to us before leaving for their break. They were up against the ship date with some details needing adjustment and with minimal engineering to fit the parts properly together. No locator pins, etc. This was a freshly printed rapid prototype and they had no time to test fit or make adjustments, so I’ve been doing my best to cobble it together. have no fear of gaps and obvious glue bombs. All will be revised well before production.
Let’s see what else… answers before there are questions…
The target retail price will be around $100.
Yes, we will be putting out a light kit. We’ll show some candid pics of that in a post later on.
Yes, we plan to do a ST:VI Kronos One version later down the road as long as sales on this first release supports that notion.
The kit is currently scheduled for September release. Yes, that soon. If we can stick to the schedule, that would mean we’ll have a test shot built to display at Wonderfest in June.
Distributors can look for this product to appear on our next price sheet which will go out within the next week. (By 3/9)
For now, enjoy a look at the mockup. We’ll put higher res pics on our Facebook page. Feel free to ask questions here and I’ll come back and answer a slew of them all at once in a future post.
Qapla’!
“He who asks a question is a fool for five minutes;
he who does not ask a question remains a fool forever” ~ Chinese Proverb
I read about this model last week, I am really considering picking it up. The detail is really beautiful, it will look great once they add the lights to it.
My thoughts exactly. Star Trek VI was the first Trek I ever watched, the K't'inga really hooked me in. TNG/DS9 always made the ship look like a relic, but The Undiscovered Country really made it look like a beast.
My thoughts exactly. Star Trek VI was the first Trek I ever watched, the K't'inga really hooked me in. TNG/DS9 always made the ship look like a relic, but The Undiscovered Country really made it look like a beast.
To be fair, by DS9, the K't'inga class really was a relic. Much like the Excelsior and Miranda classes of the Federation. Good work horses and good utilitarian space craft, but ultimately, an old design. Undiscovered Country, by far was my favorite of the "First 6", as I like to call the original movies. lol. And it was nice to see the ship get a prime role as opposed to just support duty as showcased later on.
Absolutely. That's why I stated the Fed's side of Excelsior and Miranda classes. But while the technology can be updated, the design is still decades old, and it's absolutely a GOOD design and why it is still around, but doesn't change that fact.