The error really doesn't bug me at all. I don't build kits anymore and don't ever plan to. I don't even have any investment in whether the designer acknowledged his error or not, although that factors into my assessment of his intellectual integrity, if not his technical skill as a modeler. I agree completely with your analysis above. What steams my clams, though, is an entire industry that has created and encouraged a "hobby" of building kits based on the premise that their products create models that are at the top "of the categories," rather than at the bottom, as you note. This is a misrepresentation that is understandably embraced by their customers, as well. The only reasons I object to that at all, and truly outside of these reasons I couldn't care less, is because the perception of the expensive kit model being the equivalent of the upper echelons of ship modeling creates an artificial barrier beyond which many otherwise excellent modelers will ever rise and the proliferation of completed kit models devalues the work of scratch builders in the eyes of the marketplace. The hobbyist who completes paint-by-numbers pictures will never be an artist if they believe advertising hype that tells them buying that paint-by-numbers kit will make them an "oil painting artist." I expect real fine artists feel the same about paint-by-numbers kits as many scratch modelers feel about ship model kits... they couldn't care less, but how many paint-by-numbers hobbyists might have gone on to far greater accomplishments if they hadn't been allowed to rationalize striving for nothing more than their next paint-by-numbers kit.