Work on the cab interior on my Essel Engineering Fowler F30 has progressed pretty well. All major parts have been built and primed with some even painted and installed in the cab. The only item on my list of interior items in the previous post that I haven't finish is the hand tools. I can't remember where i put the he white metal handtools that I wanted to place on the cab floor. On the other hand additional details have been added and window glazing for the front windows have been prepared.
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Painting the interior and fitting the details in progress. |
The interior is built in segments and planned to be glued in place inside the cab as painting and assembly order of different exterior fittings dictates.
The instrument panel was in an early stage in the last post on the cab interior. After drilling holes for the instruments it received a little putty and some sanding. Then I added some small push buttons from sliced round plastic stock. The panel was primed and given a cover of medium grey on the frontside and silver on the inside of the holes for the dials. The transfers are fitted to thin clear plasticard and covered with a thin layer of gloss varnish. The dials are then cut out and fitted on the inside of the panel with Humbrol 'ClearFix'. Once dry a drop of 'ClearFix' is also onto the dial from the front. The idea is that a light source mounted in the instrument panel will allow a little light to shine through the clear plasticard and thin transfer to show illuminated gauges. Fingers crossed!
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Instrument panel in plasticard and 1/35 scale transfers for the instruments. |
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The first dial fitted to the 16 x 25 mm instrument panel. Only the green lamp will light up on my loco. The red lamp has been blocked by layers of black paint on the rear side of the panel. |
Once the design of the gear levers and associated stuff was finally decided, the box for the levers and clutch pedal was quickly built. The two levers and pedal were cut from plasticard. One gear lever is for directional change - positioned firmly glued in 'forward'. The other lever is for 'low' or 'high' and permanently positioned in low gear.
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Instrument panel finished, levers and sanding pipes fitted to the sandboxes and gear installation in progress. |
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Gear levers and clutch pedal test fitted in the cab. |
The speed controller is not patterned from a real Fowler loco, but from a preserved Danish narrow gauge locomotive. I guessed the simple design would be one that a mechanic at the Nystrup workshop could have made without any fuss: a length of angle iron and a handle with a wire connection to the engine.
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Speed controller glued to the front wall in the cab. Pencil lines marking floor level to help adjust cab interior. |
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A small triangular plate fitted in the rear cab corners. A convenient place to place the note book used to keep track of the number of skips propelled back and forth each day. |
Some interior details are fitted by now, while others have to wait until repainting of the loco exterior is finished.
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Back on the layout for a snapshot. The loco is looking so much better without the original huge battery box in the cab. Next up is little work on the buffers and a repaint. |
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