For the fireman's side injector, I remembered to take some photos to show what I did. On the WDs, both injectors are the same, not handed like on many peacetime designs. I guess this was for economy and ease of maintenance.
This is the injector casting, as supplied by JLTRT. The curved pipe is the drain, which is not how it should be for the WD. It's a bit weedy, and not the right shape.
I've changed the position so you can see the casting more or less in the orientation it will be on the loco. The bottom union is the pipe to the front of the loco. Next, on the same side as the last, is the tender feed, and the last at the top is the cab control pipe.
Before we tackle the casting and plumbing, a 1mm hole has to be drilled in the etched bracket. This is for the casting peg to fit into. To get the injector in the right place, the hole is dead centre between the two pushed out rivets in the centre of the bracket. I'm sure there should be more bracketry to hold things in place, but without better references I have gone with what I have.
The first mod is to cut off the cast drain pipe. It's useful if you can avoid removing the cast bolt detail on the flange. Centre punch and drill out as far as possible, so the wire pipe detail fits in the hole. For the record, the main pipework was made from 1.3mm wire, while the feed to the front of the loco was 1mm wire from the kit box. The pipe diameters were guesstimated from the GA at between 2.5 and 3in.
The remaining holes were opened up and made deeper.
Some careful soldering later, and all the pipework is in place. By ensuring the holes are deep enough, there's enough wire soldered in to not drop out when bending to form the complex shapes later.
I found it easiest to form the drain pipe first, as it's the shortest! Next, I fashioned the tender feed pipe and left it over length more or less where the drag beam sits. The cab control pipe was formed next, so it passed into the cab floor. Once this is done, and the injector attached to the bracket, the final pipe shaped can be formed.
A hole was drilled in the cab floor so the control pipe wire can be formed up and passed into it. This acts as an extra support for the casting. I tinned the casting mounting peg and the bracket, and once I was happy the injector sat square, applied the iron. I am now ready to shape the pipe that goes forward.
There are two support brackets holding this pipe at the edge of the running plate. There is also a pipe joint. 12 and 14BA nuts were drilled out to slide over the wire, then tack solder in place - enough to give an impression of a union. The brackets were short lengths of 0.7mm brass wire, filed to give two flat sides, bent over and then fitted over the pipe, soldered to the underside of the running plate. The final shapes were formed in the end of the pipe to be lost in the murk by the frames and behind the wheels.
Phew!