15. Saddle Tank
The saddle tank will consist of a base, folded up at the ends, and a wrapper soldered around the top. Eventually.
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I thought the top corners of the ends (top left) were too abrupt so I rounded them off (top right).
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I am looking at a photo of 'Sankey' but of course this loco may be carrying a replacement tank (†). I suspect the etch is wrong and my alteration is wrong too.
(†) Photograph of 'Sankey' from SMITHERS, M "Locomotive Builders of Leeds, EB Wilson and Manning Wardle", published in Great Britain in 2018 by Pen & Sword Transport.
And then things went really pear-shaped. The boiler protruded most of 3 mm into the tank, just enough to annoy. I had promised myself I would not take off any more material because the boiler would become difficult to clamp in the machine vice, yet I still had to have a go. I also decided to hold the cutter in a collet instead of the three-jaw chuck, for no real reason except to try out the collet holder. Well, very slowly (and unnoticed), the boiler rotated in the machine vice, taking the working edge away from the cutter, while the cutter worked its way out of the collet. So I took off more material than I intended, and on a sloping cut.
I thought about going cap in hand to Slater’s to see if I could buy a new boiler tube, or asking if someone could roll me a boiler; and then I thought I had better try to put this mess right. I couldn't bring myself to take a photograph of it.
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My solution was to mill out the crooked edge to try to straighten it up and then put in this strip of 1 mm square brass. This took ages to do, but it was quicker than starting from scratch and it won't show after painting.
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So, with the rebate for the smokebox rear propped up on a strip of wood to keep the boiler upright, and the inside edges of the tank base fettled very gently, this is the progress so far.
The brass disc top left is the head of a machine screw plugging the first hole for the Roscoe lubricator. I opened out the half-etched hole here before I realised it was in the wrong place. I will go for the location shown in the photo of 'Sankey'.
I forgot to mention, I have decided to not model the boiler bands. When the boiler was still a complete cylinder, I had the option to turn down the diameter to leave the bands showing. But to be honest, they would be almost impossible to see. They aren't included in the kit so perhaps Slater's thought the same.