Next stage,
gear box and motor. You may have noticed in the pictures above that the kit has no useable hornblocks in the frame. This stage assembles the gear box that also holds the axles so that no hornblocks are needed.
The gear box is made up of nicely machined brass parts. I have read elsewhere that the original design would be a poor runner with severe gear problems, so I took a closer look.
The motor drives a cardan joint that drives the gear box. The gear box itself is made up of two worm gear sets.
And there was the problem: The worm wheel is spur-toothed, it should have a helical gearing instead. Original gear wheel below.
As you can see, I found a supplier for 0.3mm module helical gear wheel with matching diameter. The drill diameter was only 1.5mm instead of the required 2mm, but that could be fixed by careful reaming. It is too narrow, so I put two wheels together. The construction manual proposed superglue to fix the wheels on the shaft, but I prefer Loctite 603 for this purpose. The narrow wheels were doubled up with a bit of Loctite between them.
The whole inner gear box is rocking around the central shaft to improve pickup.
The complete gearbox assembly is fixed with four screws, the motor is held in place by a plate that mimics the bottom of the water tank between the frames.
It runs like a clockwork.
The axles are slotted, so that the wheel quartering will be a simple thing to do. (Hopefully)
Michael
edit: should have read it before posting