As I'll be building another coast-defence ship in the near future (HMTBD Velox will be next though!), I've got some questions to contribute to this thread.
Paper Shipwright have just released a 1/250 scale card model of the Danish coast defence ship
Peder Skram. This ship was built in 1908, and served until WW2 when it was captured and used as a flak ship by the Germans (after being scuttled in 1943); it was eventually sunk in 1945 by Allied bombing, and was raised + scrapped in 1949. It had two near-sisters, Herluf Trolle and Olfert Fischer, both scrapped in the 1930s.
I ordered the PS card kit yesterday, and am planning on scratchbuilding a 1/96 styrene model using this card model as a plan, the same way I built HMVS Cerberus (also from a PS card model). However, I wouldn't have been able to complete Cerberus to anywhere near as high a level of detail without the many contemporary photographs and drawings of the ship which I downloaded from
http://cerberus.com.au . Paper Shipwright's kits are very accurate and detailed for their size, but if you're building a model 2.6 times as large, a lot more detail is needed! (this is a problem I've also encountered with my current scratchbuild USS Hazard, the card model for which is fairly basic and simplified)
I'm not sure what date the kit represents, as the ship was refitted a number of times before WW2. At one point it had a catapult floatplane (a license-built Hansa-Brandenburg W.29 monoplane) which would be interesting to build.
After searching on Google I've found the following pages on the Peder Skram:
http://www.milhist.dk/weapons/shipdata/skram_1908.htm
http://navalhistory.dk/English/TheShips ... fense(1908).htm (can't get this one to work as a URL for some reason)
Both of these have some interesting + useful history and data on the ship but very little in the way of photos.
and this page:
http://navalhistory.dk/English/History/1939_1945/US/PederSkram_us.htm
with a large collection of photos of the scuttled ship in 1943.
Anyway, my question is - does anyone know of any other sources of reference on this ship - in online or book form? Jane's Fighting Ships of WW1 has a small photo and (I think) a small line drawing or silhouette, but that's about it.