
The commission builds I have are getting priority.
He does figures for me, I'm happy to do brass work and suchlike.
Either way I go, if Im building stuff for me- I'm occupied, if I'm doing stuff for someone else- I'm occupied.................

I'm just humbled to have someone trust me to work on expensive Tamiya's on their behalf

It was first day of school here today for me and my oldest-youngest Daughter.....................I was off work & did the drop off.
Ive done it so many times before but this one was different..........

Got the gearboxes in F05.
Had a bit of piss-farting around to get them level and square with the hull so that any track run problems would be reduced.
I stuck the idler screw into the tensioner, and ran a length of cotton from it along the hull sides over spacers to get a datum measurement for the drive sprockets.
Then, I used M3(thats NOT 8 million 37th's for you left hand drivers with weird measurements!!)stainless cap head screws with Nylok nuts to secure each gearbox to the hull.
I secured the middle one, then checked the measurements before securing the next 2 in each, using the drive sprockets as leverage to get them in the right spot.
The screws were also set with PVA during the tightening process so I should not have any coming loose.
I know this process is a basic one normally, but as this hull had all its locating pegs busted off, and the mounting points split & cracked when I got it, I had to pay more attention

You will notice the zimmerit on the inside of the hull..............

This was to stress relieve the front hull section and bring it back straight.
As I used a melt method to get the effect I wanted, it caused a slight bow in the lower hull front, which I corrected by simply doing the same thing to its inside as I did to the outside !
I have a lot of work ahead to set the roadwheels in place to match the track run correctly, but hey, thats part of the fun
