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Throwing my vote in for etched centers. A lot of the European steam scratchbuilders go the etched route and get much finer detail and relief. The S.
any one here have the etching talent? ...
The etching can be farmed out at minimal expense.
I'm smelling a dead equine again. Max doesn't want to farm anything out (even if he does the artwork himself). He, for some personal reason, wants to do all the work himself in his workshop. But he is not making his own metal - he is willing to buy it, even though he didn't mine and smeltered it.
Here's another method.The tyre, hub, and two spokes are all machined as one from the same steel rod. The two spokes are cut to size with a piecing saw. The rest of the spokes are filled in with plasticard.
That looks good Max (for your original method). But if you now want to mill out 4 spokes, wouldn't you have to start with a bar stock instead of tubing? You will need a solid center to mill the spokes out.
This first one came out really good. .023" flange depth, .319" tread diameter, total tread width .048, total wheel thickness.065. If I can make them all to those measurements within .001", I'm happy. (Frankly, I've seen more variation thanthat on commercial wheels!)
!!!! danged good idea!!!!I wish 17 spokes was divisible by something...I am thinking 15 and do 5 spokes.victor