You may not believe it but I am
trying to keep this project simple and brief by avoiding work that doesn't seem absolutely necessary. Hence, while I am fully aware that the style of brake arms and brake shoes on the chassis is wrong for a J21, I did check to see if there was a way to fit external pull rods to at least suggest the correct gear for the type of loco I'm aiming to portray. I reckoned there was just enough room to do it, without fouling the sweep of coupling rod bosses and crankpins.
I started by pulling the incorrect hopper sand boxes and the pipes feeding the middle wheels off the frames. 0.7mm brass wires 30+mm long were then slotted through the slightly enlarged pre-existing holes in the brake shoes. The rear cross-wire had to be bent slightly to pass around the bottom of the chassis.
The representation of each of the pull rods was another length of 0.7m brass wire, but in this case with flat faces filed onto opposite sides. I would have used flat strip if I had any. I limited the amount of filing for fear of work-hardening the wire and making it prone to fractures, especially with all of the file scratches on its surface. I wanted to be able to bend it to shape after soldering it to the cross-wires.
I initially soldered one pull-rod to the undersides of the cross wires on one extreme side, well away from the plastic brake shoes, arranging to have one of the flattened faces of the rod showing on the outside.
I thought about making the gear in split-down-the-middle form so as to avoid any possible electrical shorts, but I wasn't sure that the complication was necessary. I decided instead to try to space the pull rods out sufficiently from the wheels to ensure that there was no contact even with the generous side-play for the wheels in this chassis.
I found that if I laid the chassis on one side, the one already equipped with a brake pull rod, and put some packing under the motor, the crankpins on the "lower" side pushed the wheelsets up nicely to the "upper" side, while the incomplete brake gear fell to the "lower" side. That appeared to produce the sort of clearance that was needed between the pull rod and the wheels on the "lower" side. I then put some card spacers in position on the wheels of the "upper" side so that I could solder the second pull rod in place, suitable spaced from the wheels, using great care to avoid over-heating the the brake shoes which this time were very close by...
I found that in fact I needed card spacers between the pull rod and wheels on the lower side of the chassis too, otherwise there was a tendency for the cross-wires to move up through the holes in the brake shoes, closing up clearances on the lower side.
Even then I didn't get things quite right first time around. There wasn't quite enough clearance. I had to release the second pull rod and insert two thicknesses of card spaces on the upper side before re-soldering the joints. The excess length of the cross-wires was then trimmed off and any excess solder cleaned up.
The parts of the pull rods to the rear of the rear cross-wire needed to slope upwards slightly to emulate the real thing. A tweak with pliers created the necessary bend, but the sloping portions of the pull rods then fouled the rear crankpins and bosses slightly, so I made the sloping parts of the pull rods divergent too. The rear ends were turned upwards and tucked out of harm's way behind the rear steps.
Some fiddly drilling of holes, careful bending of wire, and off-piste use of a medium length handrail knob has also allowed me to add some of the missing pipework for the Westinghouse pump, and the operating rod for the front sandboxes. My chosen loco didn't appear to have the cup-type lubricators on the sides of the smokebox, so that saves me a job, and I'm not fitting grab rails above the middle steps - for reasons that I won't mention.