
With the W-irons adjusted, the castings for the springs fit rather well.

The buffer stocks are cast in solid metal, so the first task with these is to bore them out to accept the buffer stems. This means, create tubes in white metal with a 0.5 mm wall thickness. I managed three, the fourth one just fell apart. So I re-built it with some brass tube.

The kit includes four blocks of white metal to complete the ends of the headstocks. These blocks are too fat, too wide and too short, so I used square brass instead. The solebars are deeper than the headstocks, maybe this will show up less after painting. Or maybe I should shorten the brass blocks.

The W irons remain asymmetric. Those on the side with the brake have this open slot below the axlebox; those on the other side have the slot hidden behind the axlebox.

I want to paint the chassis before I attach the decking.

A temporary assembly. The model stays balanced both with and without this 1 oz weight.
I am told, this kit is “of its time”. Experience is starting to tell me, this means some parts will be wrong, or have a low specification, or not fit at all; and I should expect to make some improvisations. This is certainly the case here, and I feel I have making a corrective action at almost every step. Some people revel in this, while I tend to think the manufacturer should have tried harder. Still, no-one was holding a gun against my head telling me to buy the kit or indeed to build it.
Supposing the chassis is black and the crane is a darkish blue-grey, this ought to look fine on the layout
