There are kits of the Leahy class out there you can purchase and build, though most, if not all, appear to be out of production so you'll have to resort to EBay or the Trading Post forum here. If you are talking about a specific model that has already been built, then you will have to specify which one and directly contact the builder of the model.
TZoli wrote:Does anybody have drawings of the Leahy as commissioned or before their 1980's modernization? Though drawings of that state could help aa well.
Try Floating Drydock they have many different drawings of many Naval ships.
Also The Scale Shipyard makes a 1/96 scale model that can be built to be RC'd. He also sells many fittings to help build the model as well, and other fittings can bought from Shape Ways.
Duane
George W. Bush CVN 77, Makin Island LHD 8,
Port Royal CG 72, Cole DDG 67, The Sullivans DDG 68
Bainbridge DDG 96, Jason Dunham DDG 109
Arthur W. Radford DD 968, Kidd DDG 993
Chicago CG 11
I see, Thanks. Are these physical copies or can be acquired digitally? I'm a digital artist and I have more use of these material digitally then physically.
@tzoli - you should contact Randy at TFD to ask if he has them as digital copies. If not, you can order the paper copies and then find a service with a large format scanner to get them digitized. I have done this many times with Floating Drydock drawings in order to use them for creating Shipbucket format drawings. Rarely (if ever) has Floating Drydock had any plans available digitally. I have almost always had to order paper copies and then have them scanned. I found that "reprographics" services (at least in the USA) were usually able to scan the drawings onto a thumb drive, or make them available online for a low cost. I would usually pay about $10 per plan but it's worth it to get them digitally.
Ian Roberts wrote:@tzoli - you should contact Randy at TFD to ask if he has them as digital copies. If not, you can order the paper copies and then find a service with a large format scanner to get them digitized. I have done this many times with Floating Drydock drawings in order to use them for creating Shipbucket format drawings. Rarely (if ever) has Floating Drydock had any plans available digitally. I have almost always had to order paper copies and then have them scanned. I found that "reprographics" services (at least in the USA) were usually able to scan the drawings onto a thumb drive, or make them available online for a low cost. I would usually pay about $10 per plan but it's worth it to get them digitally.
Yeah, the issue that I live in Hungary so I have to pay quite a sum for the transport fee as well as the VAT and then find someone with a big enough scanner to scan them.