Heather Kay
Western Thunderer
After building a triplet of JLTRT Mk2s for Richard Carr, I was asked by Laurie if I would build one of their Mk2B SO kits for the exhibition stand. It seems no-one got around to building one for the stand before!
This thread is to document a straight "out of the box" build of the Mk2 kit. No extras, no scratch-building, just the parts that are there when you open the iconic white box. Along the way I'll note construction hints and tips that are glossed over in the instruction sheets.
Let's get started. For a change, I thought I'd kick off with the underframe, rather than my usual battle with whitemetal castings for the bogies.
First, here's a collection of parts. The battery boxes, heater system and air brake reservoir are resin castings which need to be carefully removed from their sprues. The part that looks like an eccentric vacuum cleaner is for coaches with air conditioning. As I'm not building one of those, it can join all the others in my Mk2 bits box. They may one day find their way into some industrial doodad for a lineside feature or something.
Lots of whitemetal castings for the various boxes and brake actuator mechanism, and brass castings for the air brake valve assembly.
Items that need holes drilling or cleaning out get my attention first. JLTRT recommend drilling out with a 0.7mm drill. Experience tells me this can sometimes be a little on the tight side, so I tend to use a 0.8mm bit. Holes are opened out in the air brake reservoir, the brake actuating cylinders, the brake linkage support brackets, the end of the heater exchange cabinet (to take the cast motor thing); larger holes (2.5mm) are opened out in the box that fits inside the cage structure, in order to take the flexible hose castings without fiddling.
Next, I take small sharp blade (actually a very fine chisel) to the corners of all the recesses where parts are to be glued. The resin moulding leaves slightly radiused corners, so just digging these out means things fit snugly in place.
The bogie fixing bolts are next. The brass knurled nut should fit straight in the precast hole, but in practice the hole needs to be drilled out 5.5mm diameter. Then the nut is a tight fit up to the knurling, and with one of the M4 bolts in place a few smart taps with a small hammer pushes everything into the hole snugly.
The instructions tell you the nut should not protrude into the upper face of the floor - it would foul the floor fret and make life difficult for the internal detail. What you are not told is the bolts need to be shortened as well. The M4 bolts will not screw neatly to the bogie bolster, allowing enough movement in normal use, unless you chop them down to 20mm long.
Here's the nut and bolt as viewed from the internal floor side.
After cleaning up the whitemetal castings - little flash this time, and most things in register, which is nice - assembling a couple of sub-assemblies and replacing odd parts for the brake linkage that were miscast with brass wire (quicker than getting Laurie to send me replacements: I don't want to spend weeks on this build!), it's time to fit all the underparts in place.
In this view you see the heater unit and the recess it's to go in. I've scored the mating surfaces to give a key for the cyano. A couple of blobs of glue on the floor, place the part, press and wait for a few seconds. Job done. I was sceptical on Richard's build that the cyano would be up to the job. On Mk1 kits, I've often pinned parts with brass wire and used epoxy for strength. Amazingly, the Mk2 parts remained fixed in place during all the subsequent handling, so I'm happy to just use the cyano alone.
And here are all the main parts in place. From sorting out the bits, cleaning up and glueing everything down, we're looking at maybe two hours maximum. I still need to add the air brake pipework and valve parts. Oh, and there's a part missing! Quelle surpise! The draincock casting slap bang in the centre of the floor was not in the bag of bits. I got all the parts for a brake coach, mind...
Once I've done the pipework details, and fitted the buffer beam dangly bits, this floor can have a nice coat of black paint squirted all over it. The missing part will be fitted later - when it arrives.
Next on my list is to undercoat the sides and ends, and hopefully get the first proper paint coats on. I was secretly hoping the livery would be more interesting than the regular blue/grey, but Laurie wants it standard BR livery. Hey-ho. I'll start on the seat painting while the first body coats dry off.
This thread is to document a straight "out of the box" build of the Mk2 kit. No extras, no scratch-building, just the parts that are there when you open the iconic white box. Along the way I'll note construction hints and tips that are glossed over in the instruction sheets.
Let's get started. For a change, I thought I'd kick off with the underframe, rather than my usual battle with whitemetal castings for the bogies.
First, here's a collection of parts. The battery boxes, heater system and air brake reservoir are resin castings which need to be carefully removed from their sprues. The part that looks like an eccentric vacuum cleaner is for coaches with air conditioning. As I'm not building one of those, it can join all the others in my Mk2 bits box. They may one day find their way into some industrial doodad for a lineside feature or something.
Lots of whitemetal castings for the various boxes and brake actuator mechanism, and brass castings for the air brake valve assembly.
Items that need holes drilling or cleaning out get my attention first. JLTRT recommend drilling out with a 0.7mm drill. Experience tells me this can sometimes be a little on the tight side, so I tend to use a 0.8mm bit. Holes are opened out in the air brake reservoir, the brake actuating cylinders, the brake linkage support brackets, the end of the heater exchange cabinet (to take the cast motor thing); larger holes (2.5mm) are opened out in the box that fits inside the cage structure, in order to take the flexible hose castings without fiddling.
Next, I take small sharp blade (actually a very fine chisel) to the corners of all the recesses where parts are to be glued. The resin moulding leaves slightly radiused corners, so just digging these out means things fit snugly in place.
The bogie fixing bolts are next. The brass knurled nut should fit straight in the precast hole, but in practice the hole needs to be drilled out 5.5mm diameter. Then the nut is a tight fit up to the knurling, and with one of the M4 bolts in place a few smart taps with a small hammer pushes everything into the hole snugly.
The instructions tell you the nut should not protrude into the upper face of the floor - it would foul the floor fret and make life difficult for the internal detail. What you are not told is the bolts need to be shortened as well. The M4 bolts will not screw neatly to the bogie bolster, allowing enough movement in normal use, unless you chop them down to 20mm long.
Here's the nut and bolt as viewed from the internal floor side.
After cleaning up the whitemetal castings - little flash this time, and most things in register, which is nice - assembling a couple of sub-assemblies and replacing odd parts for the brake linkage that were miscast with brass wire (quicker than getting Laurie to send me replacements: I don't want to spend weeks on this build!), it's time to fit all the underparts in place.
In this view you see the heater unit and the recess it's to go in. I've scored the mating surfaces to give a key for the cyano. A couple of blobs of glue on the floor, place the part, press and wait for a few seconds. Job done. I was sceptical on Richard's build that the cyano would be up to the job. On Mk1 kits, I've often pinned parts with brass wire and used epoxy for strength. Amazingly, the Mk2 parts remained fixed in place during all the subsequent handling, so I'm happy to just use the cyano alone.
And here are all the main parts in place. From sorting out the bits, cleaning up and glueing everything down, we're looking at maybe two hours maximum. I still need to add the air brake pipework and valve parts. Oh, and there's a part missing! Quelle surpise! The draincock casting slap bang in the centre of the floor was not in the bag of bits. I got all the parts for a brake coach, mind...
Once I've done the pipework details, and fitted the buffer beam dangly bits, this floor can have a nice coat of black paint squirted all over it. The missing part will be fitted later - when it arrives.
Next on my list is to undercoat the sides and ends, and hopefully get the first proper paint coats on. I was secretly hoping the livery would be more interesting than the regular blue/grey, but Laurie wants it standard BR livery. Hey-ho. I'll start on the seat painting while the first body coats dry off.