The situation so far....
I've spent a fair bit of the afternoon messing around with putting the sprung axleguards together and I think I have decided on the following modus operandi which should work when the axleguard units are fitted in an underframe.
First the axle with the two bearing holders is inserted in the slots in the "W" irons with the bearing keepers upwards.
Then I start rotating the bearing carrier around and lightly spring it out to avoid the spring, which is already in place. The nearest carrier is still sticking up and the farther one has almost been rotated fully. I've left off the farther wheel so that you can see everything.
The bearing carrier is rotated until it clips into its final position between the guides on the "W" iron. The spring is caught between the bearing carrier and the inner side of the "W" iron, and has to be got round the other side of the bearing carrier to sit under the lug.
The bearing carrier is "lifted" until it hits the stops on the "W" iron. The easiest way to do this is to pull on the top of the wheel opposite, as I'm doing here.
The next action is to push the spring wire down and move it under the bearing carrier to rest on the lug in the inner side of the carrier. The temporary tool to do this is a watchmaker's screwdriver which I could get to do the job with a push and a small twist. I couldn't show this action properly because it actually needs two hands and I also had to hold the camera.
...and we finish up with the spring on the lug and the bearing holder fully sprung and operational.
I've also had a good few goes at this operation with a 3' 8" wheel on the axle and it works quite well with the screwdriver but I think I will make a tool to do the job better. I could actually do it by filing the screwdriver blade but I'd rather keep the screwdriver functional, and make something out of a bit of brass or steel rod.
For smaller 3' 2" wagon wheels, the spring can placed as above, or there is room to get a cocktail stick on to the spring from the inside and persuade it round onto the tab on the bearer.
The tool will probably be a 1.25mm rod filed to screwdriver blade shape. but with a short, sharp projection at one end. The sharp projection will be pushed down against the back of the "W" iron to get behind the spring and push it down, then if the tool is rotated, the spring will be moved out under the end of the bearer to locate onto the lug. With the tool being 1.25mm wide, the spring can't be moved too far to jump over the end of the lug which projects approximately 1.7mm from the back of the "W" iron.
To remove the axle and bearings it's almost exactly the reverse, with the tool used to push down the wire and rotate to get it behind the bearer, then persuade the bearers out over the lugs on the "W" irons and pull the axle up and out of the "W" irons. You can also just release and withdraw the springs instead of using the tool.
I have found that I now don't need the slot or cutout for the spring at the clamping end so will just leave it as a hole as original.
I think that I've now got a setup which can be worked on with the "W" irons fixed in the underframe, and the projections outside the frame of the "W" iron assembly are not too long - the lengths of the spring holding tabs on one side, and whatever length of spring projects on the other side.
Must get back to editing the Gazette.
Jim.