
Well, there's always a wee oversight in these unscripted builds. When fitting the smoker pipes, I completely forgot that the engine deck rear panel actually slots
into the lower hull, but
below deck level. I'd fitted the smoker outlet pipes roughly level with the deck. That's a big- but not difficult to correct OOOPS!!.
If the Comet looks a tad odd in the following shots, it's because the upper hull is almost a cm above where it should be (because of offending exhaust pipes...)
Anyway, great progress- and the first switch on!!
Here's the switch, and below that, a pic of the exhaust oversight!.
I took a guess, and fitted the LEDs (which DON"T have the polarity marked on the metal-cased Tk 6.1s) as : + ive on the Right, and - ive on the left. That's how it is on the
TK 6.0 and TK 6.0s.
Interestingly, the radio controller supplied with this model had "6.0s edition" on the back. All the others I've received just have plain old "2.4Ghz". I'm wondering whether the 's' series controllers are configured differently in the firmware dept. That would explain why the 6.1s MFU is supplied with the 6.0s controller, and not the bog-standard two-button (A + B) controller we get these days.
Have a look:

The 6.0s edition radio is the one supplied with the 6.1s MFU. The bagged one was supplied with a tk6.0 MFU.
Anyway, here's the big moment after having paired the MFU and controller (Again, to pair: 1. Switch radio on 2. Press and HOLD the start button 3. With your third hand, switch the tank's power switch on. You almost need three hands...)
Lights, camera- action:

Front light were fittef to LED ch 4
Turret light was connected to LED Ch 3 (taillights). Note to self: must add
one red rear convoy light to that circuit.
Smoker on:
After a quick drive gear test on the wooden block, I had the tank performing FLAWLESSLY on the carpet and wooden floor. Until, that is, the Hennec tension collapsed when the tracks hit a raised edge on the carpet.

Luckily, no harm was done to the motors or MFU (it's capable of 160 A, and seemingly as tough as old boots), and the tracks were still able to move, forwards and backwards! Quel relief! I had the same issue on the Cromwell, when a track then locked up- absolutely solid- and I think cooked one of the Clark tk60 circuits. I've yet to retest that.
This is how much it had collapsed:

Yanked back into place:

I'm going to need some Loctite, or something else to ensure that the tensioner can't undo (twist) like that.

I thought I'd got the grub screws pretty tight on there. Maybe something else is needed, especially as this was only on carpet.
Anyway, the turret turned smoothly, and the elevation unit was fine

The recoil refused to budge (and I didn't linger on it, lest it cause a stall). I think the paint on the barrel had glued it up.
All in all, it's a great start!. Apart from the Henntec slippage, the tank drives and turns well- especially in 'slow' mode (6.1s has the best performance in the 'slow' dept of the TK 6.0 series). The springs are a tad weak, but I knew that already. However, the return rollers help keep things moving smoothly. I've also bought uprated springs.
I need to adapt the rear deck to accommodate the pipes, and then fine-tune the servo recoil (I freed the gun up from it's stuck-fast position)
other than that- it's Mission Impossible made Possible!.
Oh, yes, when all the teething troubles are sorted, I'll try to make a video of it in action. It will be my first (possibly my last- if I screw it up

)
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.