Wanting to make some headway I tackled the bogies yesterday. As this model is static, no worrying about power, drive train, pickups, wiring, fiddlefaddle. Shouldn't take long...
It took me most of the afternoon to firstly figure out how the bajillion brass castings went together, and secondly to actually attach them to the bogie frames. The instructions were helpful, but I needed to study several of the photos to actually work anything out. Even then some construction steps were oddly missing, but then that's more or less par it seems. By close of play I had all the wheels fitted, all the brake clasps fitted, and most of the wheels still went round.
Today, the pull rods and the bolsters. Hats off to anyone that has managed to make an electrically-powered set of bogies that actually move. Having managed to learn a few choice swear words, the main assembly is now complete. How I'm ever going to paint it to my satisfaction remains to be seen. I suspect both bogies will literally be blasted with black paint, then parts ungummed later!
If I'm ever asked to build another Western I shall have to give serious thought to how to make it so wheels might be removable at a later stage. As it is, all the brake knitting will have to be effectively destroyed if the client ever decides he wants to power this beastie in the future. In fact, it would be quicker to get replacement parts from JLTRT and start over!
I think it's the pull rods that run behind the wheels. I'd be tempted to leave them off if I was building a powered model. Anyway, onwards!
I ordered a pair of Maybachs from Steve Beattie yesterday. I got a nice email asking if I didn't mind waiting a short while because the kits on the shelf looked very tired. New castings were being done for Kettering in a couple of weeks. I'm fine with that, and I've arranged to collect at the show. I might be tempted by one of his 08 engines as a load for the Crocodile. Meanwhile, research into Spanner boilers goes on so I can make something that sort of looks the part.