The rest of the work continued (the car is almost finished now but I'm trying to post this in the right order

)
This car will be a shelfer, and always stay there, no way I will run her in the yard, what's the point anyway when I already have so many other vintage runners that barely run one or two batteries per year... So I decided I would do things a bit differently when it comes to electronics, and not tap into the pristine, fully functional, top-of-the-line vintage electronics stash. They still have to look the part, though
A few years ago as I worked on my "black widow" TRX1, which is a runner, I had fully refurbished a very-nice looking 411P. Only to find out that it was just not working when I first plugged it in

It still looks good though, but as most of you know, the challenge with vintage speedoes that have already been wired is to make sure the wiring works with the car you want to drop them in. In the Pro SE, fitting the electronics is a challenge anyway because the side poontoons are so narrow... Net, I was able to make this work with all kinds of cheating such turning the endbell upside down to allow the soldering - who cares if it runs backward because it won't run anyway
Then the steering servo - I am using a standard airtronics from bitd, a 94102 from my box-o-vintage-servos... Somehow it had a KP servo saver on it already, AND a (cheap) threaded rod installed... perfect candidate for this build. It's a bit of a weak servo, but it will be perfect for shelf duties. The Pro SE chassis is not drilled to mount the servo on anything than servo tape, and I am not planning on drilling it. Again, who cares, I am not planning on running it anwyway
I have to admit that such as small bit of tape was not enough to hold the servo in place at all when moving the wheels "by hand", so I replaced it with a bigger one later
Now we have throttle and steering (for show only!) , we need a radio. I had a spare Aitronics receiver and a TX-only VT-2P on the same 75Mhz band, and I believe this is the correct pair anyway. Plus the VT-2P is missing the battery retainer bottom part (if anyone has a spare one ...), so it was not going to be used on any runner anyway
This is actually a pretty sizeable receiver - and space is limited on the racing-only SE:
That antenna is at least 3 ft long (I'm barely exaggerating here

A bit of black shring wrap helps a lot. Looks much tidier now.
And with the radio (and its missing battery tray which one cannot see anyway!)
TBC...

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