mickoo
Western Thunderer
Richard,I note that the holes in the boiler for the chimney and dome are more of a marker than full diameter holes for the castings. My thinking would be that this is good practice by the designer to minimise distortion when rolling the boiler. How will you cut the larger diameter holes required for the castings to fit without distorting the shape? Slowly ease them out by hand with tapered reamers? I'm pleased to see the firebox wrapper is a better fit than the A2!
Lovely build once again.
You're right, it does limit distortion when rolled; the only problem with DA kits is the material gauge which makes rolling a right battle. I get why it's done like that as the wrappers are on sheets with other parts that benefit the thicker gauge but it's still a muscular exercise when compared to more modern kits. In support of the thicker gauge though, it limits distortion when we get to the next stage below, less chance of the drill bit snagging and stronger edge once the hole is complete.
I place the chimney centred over the small holes and scribe a line on the wrapper around the inside of the blast pipe holes, then I'll use a 1 mm drill and drill around that line with a row of closely spaced holes. To cut through the remaining fingers I just use the drill as a milling bit, pressure against the metal and drill up and down, crude but effective.
The jagged hole is then cleaned up with a drum sanding bit 2.27£ 5% OFF|30pcs 1/4" sandpaper drum sanding disc sand paper sleeves polishing wheel for woodworking Nail dremel drill rotary tools DIY 6mm|polishing wheel|sanding discsdrum sanding - AliExpress so long as the hole is larger than the chimney bore you'll never see the edge.
I'll post some photos up later of the stages it goes through to open out the holes.