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We need a tutorial on how you bend the grabs so they look all consistent.
To make this, I lay the wire down flat on a hard, flat surface, atop a small piece of graph paper (10 squares to the inch), and position the wire on the grid lines. I then hold the wire in position on the grid using the very tip of the Xuron pliers, with the side edge of the pliers at the point where I want the bend to be. Then, I bend the protruding wire to form a 90-degree angle, parallel to the first bend. The bend is made by pushing the wire with the tip of the fine tweezers.
I found this web page that better illustrates the basic idea of bending wire for grabirons & handrails:http://6axlepwr.com/HTC_BRAKE_LINE_BENDING.htmlSame idea, tho the Xuron is more suited for bending N-scale grabirons. I may try these tweezers if they help keep the parts from flying away on me Ed
The solution? Vince Kotnik just stabs the plastic shell with a sharpened piece of the same diameter (.004"?) music wire that he bends his grabs out of. The stub of sharpened music wire won't snap off in the shell. And because the diameter is so small, you really don't need that drilling action. And the "drill" won't walk on you like it would if you were spinning it. Just press it firmly into the shell.
I usually make templates for the grabirons and cut levers, and sometimes the end handrails. For side handrails I just hold them up against the original ones that I cut from the model. (Since the originals are relatively thick, you just need to take care to consistently sight along either a top edge or bottom edge, one or the other.) Templates need not be elaborate, just a single, fine line will do. Better than a photocopy or scan might be to print out a scale drawing to actual size. Really handrails have a surprising amount of forgiveness, in that they don't need to be super-precise -- just install them straight/level/square and they usually look OK. Ed