when eventually i decided one day to have a tidy, the dome showed up so i stuck it in a box along with a load of other bits and pieces that i thought might be useful.
a few days later i raided one of those big coffee machines you get in the motorway services, those little wooden stirrers were perfect for the lagging planks on my boiler .
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it just so happened i had a length of steel pipe out in the yard so i hacked a piece off with my angle grinder,and by pure fluke it fitted the dome perfectly, this was a good sign.
i then glued the planks onto the steel using cheap super glue, soldered together some tiny steam gauges and made the front panel.
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thick copper wire was used for the pipework with thin copper sheet brackets i also cut tiny copper washers for where the pipes went into the body.
i also gave it a couple of coats of varnish, bad idea it was horrible i eventually stripped it all off and did it again.
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then i turned my attention to the underside, beaten out from a copper blank similar to the brass one i used for the dome, it originally had a round base with sides at right angles , i just flared out the sides till it fitted the body.
some of this junk you can see on the bench is stuff Ive had lying about for years and years.
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grilles and meshes were added along with a brass firebox door i also did a dry run with the legs just to get the proportions right.
a long drawn out period of messing about with leg strut configurations followed, it took about a week to get things right, i also discovered a prime piece of brass pipe out in the yard in the form of a blowlamp pump, this eventually became the topmost tube in the leg assembly.
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my fingers were scorched and blackened by metal polish, but things were really beginning to take shape.
1 comment:
Wow!! This is fantastic. A real tribute to R2 as well as a beautiful work of art.
- Chris
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