Only 22 days to get it ready
The car and parts were relatively clean but I took it all apart and gave everything a good scrub the usable chassis had hard glue residue which needed sanding down this meant the anodizing was scrubbed of in places, inspired by past projects I have seen on this forum I had hoped to get the chassis to a mirror finish and after much sanding and cleaning and sanding and cleaning…… you get the picture, I gave up and left it with more of a brushed finish. I only have a month to get this done and I wanted to rock up to Dudley with a finished car not just a shiny chassis

I plan on going the whole hog one day but for now I stand in awe at efforts of others.
Between the Cougar 2 works transmission and the Club 10 lot I ended up with three identical diffs, can anyone tell me which spec it is I don't think they are club 10 or works spec the diff washer carrier is plastic, I think the works ones are alloy?
The Slipper clutch needed a new race for one side of its thrust bearing, the pic shows original snapped in two

but other than that it was just a case of cleaning and giving it fresh silicone grease and it was as good as new.
I had hoped to use the front shock tower that came with the car but when I fitted the red vari shocks found that the shocks were two short. I guess I need to keep an eye out for a set of rears to get it to work. Thankfully I have a Cougar mk1 one project which came with a home made shock tower, after much measuring I found only one set of holes to be evenly spaced so although it looks like I have lots of shock set up options any other position would leave the shocks at odd angles.


Anyone recognise these purple alloy rear wishbones that came fitted to the car? When fitted with a single washer between chassis and pivot block it gives the wheels mad toe out, I would need to use lots of spacers to get 1 deg toe in which would probably leave the suspension with lots of unwanted flex. I guess they are for a different car, perhaps they would work better with a Cougar 2 works I figure it has a different chassis to the other early cougars, my works transmission certainly wouldn't fit on my chassis with out drilling new holes.
The shorty battery has been secured with a cut down Radshape battery holder and mission posts and strap I have added a little hole in the strap to get a balance lead and lipo low voltage sensor fitted. I will use foam to stop the battery from moving and shearing off the balance lead.
All I have left to do now is fit new tyres to the wheels, paint the body shell and learn how to use a comm lathe and prep my Schumacher motors for the big day.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
Chris
Loving all things RC