Back in "the good old days" having a full set of technical pens was essential for my day job. Being a dab hand with Letraset and Letraline work, plus pasting up bromide galleys typeset on the CRTronic typesetter… I don't miss those days at all. Being able to do it all on a screen, in full colour, and outputting - in my time - colour sep positives was amazing. Now it's direct to print stuff. I'm so out of touch.
So, I turned my hand to something people find useful.
I've had a pretty productive weekend. With the glazing done, all bar those pesky ventilators, there seemed little reason not to press on with fitting the main interior parts.
It took a while for me to find the storage boxes with the seats, partitions and catering area bits. They'd been made up a long time ago, and safely stored while the rest of the thing lurked at the back of the bench. Now things are batting along quickly enough.
How to fix the various bits and bobs was an interesting session. Ordinarily, I would use cyano, with an impact adhesive coming second. In fact, the latter might have been a good choice. As there is a certain amount of flexing that the body will encounter as I fight the roof into place, I didn't want a rigid or brittle fixative. Although many of the components are located with slots and pegs, the accuracy of the original design work has had to slip a little by the way.
I settled on Micro Kristal Klear. This, as you know, is a form of PVA used by aero modellers and the like for filling small windows and attaching cockpit transparencies. Once dried, it remains flexible, so I thought it might serve a useful role here.
Each seat unit has a main slot where the back board fits into the floor. To help things slide home I used the whizzydisc to chamfer the sides. A dribble of Klear along the slot, and a couple of blobs where the seat sides met the coach sides, and hopefully things will stay put indefinitely.
Having installed all bar one of the seating bays, the bar area and the vestibule partitions, I am now letting things set for the night. If it looks okay in the cold light of Monday I shall fit the final part, runs seams of Klear up various dividers, and retouch the paintwork again, before trying the tables for size.
The finishing post is within sight! I think I need a lie down.