Overall, this was a lot of fun for my first go around with these. :)
I was able to find an armature (red wire all three poles / gray lams - on a #2 top plate) in my pile of used parts that checked at 17.1, 16.9, 17.0 and had a relatively flat comm plate. Spent some time with 400 through 1200 grit papers and have it looking pretty well squared away now (sounds nice and smooth on the power supply)
Other than the comm tool - I don't have any of the fancy tools/jigs/etc. used for checking the chassis, top plate etc - but did use a couple pieces of drill rod through the axle holes along with a set of upside down utility blades to pic out what I think is a "good" chassis out of the spares pile. It is a #3 solid rivet and looks to have no notable twist to it using this method. :banana-dance:
The fitment of the Johnny Lightening blue/white magnets was next. (can definitely tell that they are stronger than what I have in my stock t-jets!) They both required a little time sanding with 400 grit on the two rectangular areas that face the armature in order to get them to drop into their holes - but it the amount of material that had to be removed to fit this chassis was minimal (and using my calipers, I and well in excess of the .700 min distance noted in the rules) :dance:
I am reusing the gears that were with the arm and top plate from my spares - they feel smooth and are nice and quiet - so not sure I would gain much by ordering up aftermarket gears...
This lead to the only real hiccup I had with the build - the rear axle... :?
I don't have a wheel press, but was able to fab up some inserts for pressing the new wheels onto the drill blank axle using old t-jet wheels, a short piece of t-jet axle and my Hudy pinion press - the combination of which, worked out rather nicely!
The problem I am having is, even though I am using .063" drill rod, neither of the two spare factory crown gears I have tried are very tight on the axle. If I try to roll over the drive train using the rear tires, the gear will slip on the shaft. :| I don't "think" it will slip under power on the track, as it does take some force to get it to slip - but it doesn't give me warm fuzzies... at all... :(
Is this normal and/or is there a common fix for this to allow reuse of the original gear (grind some flats on the axle and super glue?) - or am I stuck with having to order a gear / get creative etc if I want to use the drill blank axles verse a factory splined axle?
Any words of wisdom would be appreciated! :)
From there though, everything else seemed to fall into place rather well, with the Wizzard front end (wasn't sure where to start with the weights - so installed them all to start), new shoes and springs all going on and fitting well.
(The shoes look to be nice and flat against the rails of the old piece of model motoring track I have for doing "set up" - but not sure how the rail height of that compares to the rail height of the routed wood track at the commercial track yet - so some tweaking of those may be required yet.)
I think that the only things I have left to do is to chamfer the hole in the guide to allow the new beveled screw to fit up where it belongs and it should be ready for testing at the track this Wednesday! :D
If you guys have any thoughts on the crown gear issue and/or want to pass on any "words of wisdom" on this build or this class of car in general, I would definitely appreciate it!
Thanks! :D
And just so you guys know that it "really happened" - here are some pictures of the car as it sits right now (sorry didn't take any progress shots) - Enjoy! :)
Top side of the chassis:
(please excuse the excess oil on the top plate - have been doing "run in" on the power supply and hadn't cleaned it up for that shot)

Bottom side of the chassis:

From the side:
(I have to look to see if I can't get the front down a bit as it looks a bit "up in the air" with the small front tires on there - but I think I may be close to sitting on the top plate rails already)

From the front:

From the rear:
