The inner ends. Oh dear, getting worse by the minute. The door is a separate piece and was like a surfboard. I filed the back flat so that it would sit into the recess. The witness marks are another thing altogether. Why? Just why? Why on the outside? There are faint plank marks and the handrails also on the face, so any sanding would remove these. Frankly this a complete dog's dinner and I can't see that this would be more acceptable in the late 60s than it is now.
At this point I took a long hard look at it, calculated the forward time to spend both finishing and correcting it. I decided that this was not worth the effort and abandoned the project. Sometimes it's better to walk away.
Thoughts: Some of the Dapol reissues work; the building kits are OK with the usual caveats. Here though it gets embarrassing. Say you were a new modeller and you hand over nine quid in Gaugemaster for one of these. This is, or should be, entry level stuff; Saturday afternoon kit building. It's a full ten star fail and thus tars every other plastic wagon kit with the same brush before the ponies are out of the gates. I've had half a century of kit building and I can't make this work without some major non-cost-effective butchery. Detailing a Tri-ang would be a better start point.
I've never owned a Dapol brake van kit, but I'm sure I remember seeing the circular marks on the inner ends of an Aifix one I had a while back. I probably passed that one on at a WRG show, though it may still lurk in a box somewhere. You're right of course, this sort of thing is quite discouraging when all you want is a nice simple kit build...
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