Thanks Julian. I wish I knew about the blow down holes in the frames being in the wrong place! I had to make ugly circular extensions to the rectangular holes to accommodate the valves. Clearly Martin Evans did not make a Springbok. In fact, I am informed with some authority that the first Springbok made was actually made here, in Australia but I can't remember the builders name. I would love confirmation of this, if anyone knows. Another problem I did not know about is that the bogie wheels hit the front cylinder covers on a modest curves. This happened on my test run on our largest radius track, and apart from trying stiffer side control springs, I don't know what to do about it.
Some of the changes I was forced to make I was worried would lower performance. The firebox is narrower, because of our 4-9/16 back to back wheel standard and also because of the 4 mm frames I used. I dropped the number of firetubes to from 18 to 16 because 18 did not really fit, with our AMBSC requirement for 3 mm ligaments in the tubeplates (proved unnecessary by Alan Wallace in a scholarly article in AME). Also due to the availability of 1-3/4 clip-lock rings, I increased cylinder bore to this from 1-11/16. The valves also have clip-lock rings. These excellent rings were used in truck transmissions, but no longer, so they are now almost unobtainable.
The valve gear was designed using the Wallace simulator with Don's help. Then the rods and links were cut out to these numbers (rods laser cut, expansion links wire cut. I hacked out one connecting rod just to feel honest!). The valves were then timed by putting them where the simulator said they should be when the piston was in a particular position, e.g., in full gear with the valve measured to be moving the specified 0.685" with a dial indicator, the back port was set to open to exhaust when the cylinder had traveled 92.3% of its travel (measured with a depth gauge). The valves are not set to equal leads, as that did not give the best events with the changed dimensions.