Next thing is to get this baby up and rolling. Once again, Stug builders have plenty of options including heavy duty rolling gear with early or late hubcaps and return rollers. The first batch of Finnish Stugs were more involved in the fighting and they were early Gs, so I am going to ‘early’ with this build.
And so the first problem is encountered. When I ordered the Mato wheels, I didn’t read the fine print. They are meant for the Heng Long chassis, and come pre-assembled with cast swing arms instead of stub axles.
I checked with the usual Stug Life dealers, and no-one sells the axles separately. Once again I fished around my box of spares and other bits bought in haste and worked out I needed something like the rear idler axle (1) and I would need five for each side. I did have 16 of these old Tiger axles (2) to work with. With some 5mm brass tube being the right size to fit the Mato bearings, I cut it into lengths to bush the Tiger axles and trimmed them to fit the Taigen swing arms (3).
But to fit inside the swing arms, I had to turn them down to 3.5mm. This was a bit tricky as I don’t have a lathe, but I held them in a hand-held drill and ground them with a Dremel. They are a bit rough, but with some hand finishing they now fit nicely.
Now it needs some weight to sit evenly on the road wheels.
Next came the rear idlers, which also ride on bearings, with a brass bush over the screw-in axle. The bushes would not push into the bearings by hand, so I put the bushes in the freezer and the idlers in the oven on low temp. After 20 min a pair of pliers helped to push them in.
The left idler then screwed into the track tensioner nicely.
But the right one looked like it came off a cart from Westeross. The cast swing arm wouldn’t engage properly with the brass spigot of the adjuster.
A closer look showed it had some casting flashes that interfered with the fit. Once they were filed off it then sat much better.