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Robbman, I think I know who you are and I know the quality of yor designs. I am not at all complaining about the design.
Unfortunately, I do not put the modeling in model railroading.Any thoughts?
You only need to make the attempt. The modeling will come from that.I'll have to check, but I am not even sure the Atlas hood is the same height as the Kato hood. I think Atlas is more accurate. I'll have to check that.This can be done. But it is going to take a bit of work on the inside of the Atlas shell. The place where you run into trouble is where the Kato frame bulges out around the motor, the bumps that secure the shell and a little at the top of the frame. You would need to grind away the inside of the Atlas shell to fit around the bulge in the frame. You would need to take 0.016" off each inside face. The Atlas shell is 0.030" thick. Next you would need to relocate the bump cavities. Easy to do. After you have cut the inside of the shell to fit over the motor hump and removed 0.015 off the top of the frames highest points, slip the shell over the chassis until it contacts the sill unit. it is going to bulge wildly at the back end where the frame bumps are. Do not worry about this. Just make sure the shell bottoms out on the sill unit. Squeeze the shell firmly over the bumps. You will see a slight whitening where the shell bulges out. Remove the shell and look on the inside. You should see a very small dimple where the frame bumps pushed into the plastic. Use a steel ball cutter, maybe .0625" to .125" in diameter, and cut a dimple into the shell. Next, you will need to reduce how much the frame bumps sticks out. Reduce it by half. Check your fit and if it needs to be reduced more, do more until the shell fits WITHOUT the side bulging anymore. As for the shells, the Atlas shell I believe is not the same width as the Kato shell. I actually think the Kato shell is slightly wider. So this means when you mate the hood up with the clean air room, the hood will not line up perfectly and you will have a small gap on the left side between the hood and walkway which you could fill with styrene strip. But if you make your cuts right, you may be able to hide this because there is a natural seam between the clean air room and the engine compartment. On the prototype, that seam can be pretty obnoxious at times. From the Atlas shell, cut the clean air room off before the seam between the clean air room and first engine room door. This will also be in front of the exhaust hatch. Finish the cutting just up to the start of the seam. Try to make this as square as you can. Take your time. Use masking tape as a guide if you have to. On the Kato shell you will want to cut past the seam and into the first engine room door. Then clean your cut back to the beginning of the seam on the clean air room.Gluing the two plastics together is going to be a real PITA also. Atlas used the really nice soft styrene that takes to gluing with solvent cement a real joy. Kato uses ABS which is a real PAIN to glue to anything with solvent cement. So if you are going to attempt this, Make sure the Atlas shell slips over the frame easily. Otherwise at anytime you may want to disassemble the model, the shell pieces may come apart because of the Kato ABS plastic.