Very grateful thanks to Mark, Kev, Roy and Carl for those great compliments!
I've been thinking hard about one particular 'improvement', whether it was worth the considerable effort or just to leave it in the kit finish. After some trial efforts on scrap plasticard I've come to the decision - well I've gone this far, might as well go the whole hog! It means a lot of preparation work on parts that would have gone straight on but what the heck - the trials looked really good!
The following section may well get a little confusing, it has a great many photos many of which look very similar without the text here to point out the evolving wiring system (it certainly confused the heck out of me!)
Anyway,
Photo 1 illustrates the parts contained in
Pack 82. I’m mostly concerned with the rear mounted auxiliary battery connector on the extreme right, the other four pieces are the rear exhaust pipe brackets and the two rear body panel supports.
Photos 2 and
3 show the two possible positions for the battery connector,
Photo 2 shows how the connector is fitted on in the kit, and also, on the Tamiya kit as well.
Photo 3 shows how it appears on the majority of the reference photos – instead of being bolted onto the rear suspension chassis panel, it has moved over to the base of the rear wing with the lower of the two previous fixing points being converted into a chassis earth point. The second option is the one I’m going for, and also, this is another example of the Centauria kit having a nicely detailed part which does nothing! The connector just sits there whereas in the smaller Tamiya kit it is actually connected to something – the starting motor!
Until I actually opened up the poly pocket, all I could see of the connector was what you can see in
Photo 4, I had visions of having to scratch build all those little ‘vanes’ running along the sides but once the part was out of the packet it was obvious that it had been created with all the details on there as seen in
Photo 5, (which I would have realised if I’d looked at the instructions photos closer!)
Since the conversion required all of the existing bracket to be cut off I decided to go down the resin route again and create a copy so I didn’t ruin the original, change my mind and end up with no connector at all! The little mould and resin casting are shown in
Photo 6. One slight change to the usual mould making was used here – those two plug in sockets were just begging for an air bubble so I took a length of cured silicone rubber which had been sliced off a previous mould to create the locating ‘shelves’ keeping the two halves of the moulds together, and sliced it down into two thin strips which just fitted into the sockets. These protruded a couple of mm or so from the kit part and when the first silicone rubber was poured into the mould box it chemically bonded to the strips which became part of the mould. As you can just make out on the resin cast – no lumps from air bubbles!
Photo 7 shows that even clearer with the resin copy pushed into the ‘proper’ position as per the kit instructions. To convert the casting, the two ‘wings’ of the bracket along with the fixing pins were cut away, the back face was sanded flat and a thin plasticard strip super glued down the back to form the new bracket. Four holes were then drilled into the connector, two into the rear end facing the engine and two through the centre. The two rear holes had a brass rod glued in which would become the push on attachment points for the following cables, the connector was then placed in it’s new position on the shroud of the red light at about a 45 degrees slant upwards and the two central holes used to start a drill into the shroud. This is shown in
Photo 8 after the shroud holes were drilled out, note also, the red light casing is also drilled to take a single brass rod shown by the arrow. As shown in
Photo 9, two more brass rods were then glued into the connector sitting flush with the top face and protruding out to fit into the shroud holes. The rod ends will be hidden by a pair of resin cast nuts, seen in the foreground. Nearly forgot! The inner walls of the two sockets were also cut away to match the version seen in the reference photos.
Photo 10 shows the connector primed and then painted with
Mig Matt Aluminium before the usual
Humbrol Blue Grey Enamel wash with a thin black tube attached to the brass rod on the red light body. Next to go on was a thicker black rubber tube, painted red on the end and equipped with an even bigger rubber ‘collar’ (the reason for that will become clear soon). This was pushed onto the top brass rod with a drop of super glue for good measure as shown in
Photo 11. The big red tipped black tube is the main live cable, which will go direct to the battery positive terminal on the engine deck. The next item on the list is shown by the arrow in
Photo 12. This is a chassis earth connection point which is directly connected to the negative plug on the auxiliary connector and is actually bolted into the redundant chassis hole previously occupied by the self same connector! This is essentially a big hefty bolt and screw connector hidden under a black rubber boot for protection. The booted connector is made from two sizes of styrene rod as shown in
Photo 13. The larger one was drilled out twice – once into the back to allow a length of copper micro tube to be glued in, this is the same diameter as the locating hole in the chassis plate, the other hole is the diameter of the smaller rod, drilled in at right angles and liquid poly glued in place. The end of the main rod was rounded off to match the rubber boot profile, the smaller rod is simply a peg or spigot over which a black rubber tube will be glued to create the main earth lead.
Photo 14 shows the finished connector with the copper tube cut down to just fit into the hole, the styrene boot painted with
matt black Humbrol enamel and the rubber tubing pushed over and super glued to the smaller spigot rod.
Before gluing the boot in place I wanted to do a little alteration on the four holes into which the rear wing support fits. The instructions say to simply push fit the support in place which is fine as you also have to remove it again to fit that horrible alternative rear section (and also if you want when fitting the exhaust pipes in position later). What I didn’t like much was the amount of bending of the entire rear panel when trying to get the pins all the way in! Since I wasn’t going to be removing the rear wing (or actually adding the wing on to the support until the end) I was much happier to just enlarge the locating holes a little as seen in
Photo 15, allowing the four pins to go in smoothly and just super glue the thing on permanently. With that out of the way I could then glue the earth lead in to the lower hole as shown in
Photo 16.
Now comes the extremely fiddly part (though not a patch on the exhaust upgrades coming later!) The thick rubber tube was cut to length and super glued into the bottom brass pin on the aux connector (the top one in this upside down shot of course). Once that was set the smaller tube from the red light housing was also cut to size and pushed down into the rubber tube of the boot itself, again securing with super glue. This is shown in
Photo 17, the arrow is indicating the positive lead off the connector before that goes off to the battery. Remember that rubber tube sleeve on the positive cable? This serves the same purpose as the rubber boot and allows the live lead from the starting motor to be ‘spliced’ into the live cable from the connector as indicated by the arrow. This is shown in
Photo 18 and is made from single core telephone cable, painted with red enamel and slid into a suitable black pvc tube. This wire is great for pre-shaping, because it is a single core it will bend into whatever position you want and then stay there!
Photo 19 shows the other end of the live cable after trimming to length and super gluing into a new hole drilled into the starting motor – I’d already drilled two holes for these wires, but I just couldn’t find them again!
In the foreground is the other starting motor wire, this time painted in light blue enamel and pre-formed into the shape to come off the motor, bend around underneath the motor body (actually over it when it’s the right way up) and then pass up the side of the gearbox on its way to the ECU . In this case the blue wire simply goes inside the black tubing a short distance, the rest of the cable is just the tubing as that is easier to thread along under the existing cables and wires on top of the engine. The wires are all tidied up in position in
Photo 20 whilst
Photo 21 shows the wheel support in use as it was all through this part holding the car upside down whilst threading the wires in. The long thin black tubing seen on the underside of the chassis is the rest of the starting motor blue wire. The thicker black tube from the live socket is shown in
Photo 22 after finally being trimmed to size and connected to the previously constructed battery terminal fitting. Like the socket end, this was also painted red at the tip. Immediately above the red part is that starting motor lead coming up from below and snaking over the engine on to the ECU. Finally, in the ‘biggie’,
Photo 23, you can see the finished re-wiring exercise the right way up! I think it certainly add more interest to this area compared to the kit version although I think if that version was only fitted out with the correct wiring instead of just sitting there doing nothing it would also be a great improvement too!
In the next instalment, probably the final large-ish scratch built addition followed after that by a tiny extra which was probably the most infuriatingly difficult one to fit on in the entire model – and then comes the body work!
Until then, Happy Modelling to you All!
Robin.
Apologies again for all that text to read through!
Plymouth57 attached the following image(s):
First wooden ship:
The Grimsby 12 Gun 'Frigate' by Constructo Second:
Bounty DelPrado Part Works Third:
HMS Victory DelPrado Part Works 1/100 scale
Diorama of the Battle of the Brandywine from the American Revolutionary War Diorama of the Battle of New Falkland (unfinished sci-fi), Great War Centenary Diorama of the Messines Ridge Assault
Index for the Victory diary is on page 1