Well, OK, I have not actually been counting, but this hobby seems to be full of tiny lessons.
Yesterday I decided to start the inletting of the fancy Jaeger entry pipe with it's long top piece. I had read somewhere that it helps to get the barrel portion inlaid down to depth fist, so the inletting of the finale can just slowly work its way down. So I took one of the forward ram rod pipes as a pattern and got the barrel inlaid down it turned out nice and tight on the sides and nice and flush with the bottom of the channel. Certainly the best ram rod pipe inlay I have done to date.
Then I started working the actual entry pipe, pivoting it down into the existing inlet as I went. After a few hours, with it about 80% there, I noticed how gappy it was along the sides. I thought what the heck, I have not cut anything there. So I grabbed the one I used as the inlet pattern and it goes in nice and tight. What? I grab the calipers and the entry pipe is 0.045" smaller than the forward pipe that I used, so a gap of 0.0225, the thickness of a good patch, on each side. Well $#@*, chalk that up to lesson 237.
I will fill it with something later.