When I was done with all the servicing stuff I took down the buggy from it's storage spot and had a good look at it's parts and potentials. I also took some measures and prepped for the CAD-phase of the design process...
The sidepanels of the buggy are made of some kind of multilayered cardboard and that green paintjob was horribly done. So this beauty might need some careful sanding and than a paintjob that seals that cardboard stuff to protect it from rain and moisture.
Everything laid out:
The buggy is about 90cm long and 45 cm wide
I took a wheel from a trailer to try some options (front is left):
#1 will give me more than enough room for my heels when pedaling and flows nice with the decoration lines of the buggy.
#2 places the rear axle in correspondance to the decoration lines, but will make the lower parts of the buggy basically unusable
#3 could be the way to go, as it probably provides enough pedaling room and still offers enough storage possibility in the buggy
It seemed to best to me to prep for some CAD (Cardboard Aided Design) designing during the next stay on the campground so I took a scale 1:1 sketch, that will get transfered onto cardboard later:
The buggy sits now again tucked away on the shelf in the basement awaiting his new destiny...