This thread is now officially hijacked for my own purposes! I will be documenting progress on my A3 build, which is exactly like kvom's, except that I don't have CNC capabilities. Now anyone looking to build this locomotive in the future will have TWO projects for reference! If we hit an image limit, I'll start a new thread.
A buddy of mine let me drive his 2-8-2 Mikado around the club track, which has inspired more progress on my own locomotive. Been working on the brake system for the engine this past week. Today I made the bracket which holds the foot brake pedal in place. Used some scrap 1.5x1.5 CRS, since I didn't have any 1.25x1.25 as the plans implied. Since I hadn't drilled/tapped the holes in the footplate yet, I changed the spacing of the bolts to better fit my wider-than-spec bracket (1.5" instead of 1.25").
This is one of those parts that is an odd shape, seemingly designed to give the first-time builder a hard time! A simpler shape would get the job done, but I decided to oblige Mr. Hiraoka and machine the profile as drawn. Here's the profile marked out:
I drilled the required holes first, so the drill bits wouldn't have to break out of the metal at a weird angle:
The surface finish on the main hole is absolutely atrocious, due to my clapped-out 9/16 drill bit. Plans say to ream, but I don't have a reamer at the moment, and it's not really necessary since the bronze bushings that get loctited into this hole will be turned to fit anyways. This is an example of a non-critical component that can be "close enough" and still work just fine. As long as it works I'm happy.
Next I got creative with the bandsaw, hacking away as much material as possible to spare my endmill the work:
I used calipers and a rule to markup the straight edges, but totally eyeballed the radius. Again, not critical.
I ended up making a few more cuts, but this is basically what I was left with:
Next it's off to the mill to cut away more metal. I lined up the scribed lines with the top of the vise jaws, then milled down until I hit the line:
I repeated this process for all straight surfaces, then roughed out the radius with several cuts:
I finished rounding off the profile with a disc sander, then cleaned up the part with files and sandpaper. The last operation was to counterbore for the rear bolts with my 5/16 endmill:
Finally, I clamped the bracket to the footplate, spot drilled the holes, then drilled and tapped them 8-32. Here's the bracket mounted in its final position:
All-in-all, this one part took about three hours to make. If you're gonna build one of these locomotives, you have to be able to enjoy the building process! More brake progress coming soon...