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Nice!The idea of labeling the decoder is an excellent one; I'm going to start doing this!Yes, we all need to thank John LeMerise for doing that enclosure; it sure makes life simpler!John C.
Excellent install! Question....would a speaker and enclosure have potentially fit in the depression on the other end of the drive? Hard to tell if that is where the cab or nose sits (I don't have one of these models yet), but it looks like it might be close to being able to fit there. I'm sure you evaluated this as a possibility but wonder if it was a lighting issue or something else that drove the decision. Not having a milling machine (yet), it sure is nice it when I can find a way to fit everything somewhere with minimal-to-no frame grinding.
Bob/John. Yep - the broken frame was with the Dremel (in a milling vise), but before I got my Proxxon mill. The Dremel holder literally slipped, and went where it wasn't supposed to at the top. When I took it out of the vise to inspect the damage, I realized how close I had come to severing a small "shaft" holding the frame together. While handling... well, it was no longer holding The Kato SD70 frame is interesting, in that the two halves do not screw together! The whole frame is held simply by the motor mounts on the plastic piece, and the fuel tank.Well, it was long enough ago, and I learned a lot about milling (like buying a real mill) from that.
Ah yes. The infamous screwless frame. I have enormous respect for Kato, but sometimes I wonder if their engineers like to do stuff "just because we can." John C.