Stanier 8F in ScaleSeven – part 21: the tender running

In the end I had to take much advice from the fellow-members of “Western Thunder” – a model railway nerds website.  I dismantled the tender and much of the running gear and made sure that all of the compensation mechanism was free to move.   One suggestion had been to twist the chassis, but in the end I achieved much the same effect by introducing a spacer at one corner between the outer farm and the chassis, thus effectively applying a permanent twist to the latter.

The tender now runs:

However I realised that as it is the front wheels lifting off the track by 0.5mm, testing the tender on the S-shaped curve but with a dip in the track might not be good enough: the concavity of the track might keep the front wheels in contact when flat track or even a hump in the track might have the opposite effect and cause a derailment.

So instead I had to raise the centre of the test track and make the tender run over this.  The only realistic way to do this is to pull it behind the locomotive!  This became the first trial runs of the locomotive and completed tender:

It doesn’t run smoothly though – this is because there are electrical short-circuits created between the pony truck wheels and the front locomotive steps, and also between the guard irons on the tender (the metal posts which clear the rails of anything before the wheels run over it on the real thing).  However the assembly never de-rails, which is a triumph!

Small First time Loco and Tender 01

 

 

Here is a picture of the whole assembly as it is now.

 

 

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Stanier 8F in ScaleSeven – part 20: tender finished (not quite)

Now in some respects I am very pleased with my progress, but in other respects quite distressed and appealing for help!
I have finished the tender, with reservations – it doesn’t run as well as it should and needs to!

As you can see, iSmall Tender complete not painted 05t looks OK (given that it isn’t painted).
However even on my S-shaped test track it de-rails: there is a compensation mechanism which should allow there to be free movement of the rear four wheels almost independent of each other but this doesn’t seem to work completely effectively. If it did, the six wheels would all be always in contact with the rail. However the front axle seem to be able to have one rim off the rail, and so with the small S7 flanges, it de-rails. Adding weight to the front end of the tender makes no difference.
I had been so careful …. !
At every stage of construction I had run the tender chassis up and down behind the locomotive and it ran without problems. However at the some stage it becomes necessary to put it all together, take a deep breath and solder it up in such a way that it cannot be taken apart to adjust it.

Small Tender complete not painted 06

 

By the time I had the water-scoop parts and the split-axle pick-up components all crowded together, it looks like this:

 

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Click to enlarge

I dread having to unsolder it and take it all apart again!
It looks so good.

However looks aren’t everything, and unless additional lubrication of the moving parts frees up the mechanism and allows it to run over uneven track, what else can I do?