Well I better get posting something while I am searching for the AWOL SD card showing the install of the drivetrain, something unsettling seeing your rare, original, expensive drivetrain six-eight feet up in the air. Man I got to find that damned card, till then I can fill you folks in on the finer details of kett restoration. To that end I shall lay out the late war kettenkrad Notek tactical lighting system.
The kettenkrad in its early years had a two lighting systems, tactical-with low watt bulbs and shielded lights and non tactical with "white" light headlight, tail and marker lights as one would find on a motorcycle. As the war dragged on the need to simplify the manufacture led to a number of items being deleted as they where not really needed. The non-tactical light system was one of these items and the Notek light where kept. Original Noteks are crazy expensive and one day I was looking at my crappy Czech post war version of a German Notek and it dawned on me that if I the outer piece I could mate them and make a workable copy. A fellow in Russia had what I needed and so my project was to make it look and work a true wartime rear Notek.
Top is CZ lamp and rusty (go figure, more rust) correct Notek.

Gutting the CZ lamp gives you lots of great stuff for the conversion such as clean lens, backing piece, rubber gasket. I was suprised at how close the internal bits matched the German wartime stuff that I| had.

Face starting to come together, note the Notek symbol on the shiny area.

Using JB Wel I filled in the pitting after bead blasting the cover then primed and painted.

There are two types of rear fixtures early ketts had a very angle fixture and late ketts had a more "tombstone" shaped fixture. What you see here is the late tombstone from the Czech Rep, trailer power socket from France, CZ made rear light with Russian sourced Notek face. The license plate is double stamped with 60mm wide Wehrmacht Registration stamps (some people insist in calling that a "Feldpost" stamp, trust me its not a FP stamp).

^ And looking thru the duct you can just see my 600 Euro radiator.
The front Notek casts a low, dim, shielded light on the ground in front of the vehicle, these lamps where a common German item and versions where made postwar but less the stamped in Notek symbol. A point of pride is I must have the only three Notek stamped bolts in Canada, no different then finding a rare or unique gun part or marking.

Front plate with 60mm stamp (I smeared it to give it a look less then show room perfect as a driver tasked would do). Where have you seen that number before??

Saving Private Ryan, it was a toss up between the plate number worn by the motorcycle riden by Steve McQueen (who apparently owned two kettenkrads) in the movie The Great Escape or the SPR kett which got the nod as it was a Kettenrad Vs a Murdercycle. There is a pretty interesting story behind Steve McQueen and the Great Escape ride BTW.

I had long been searching for ANY pictures of Battle of the Bulge kettenkrads and just cannot find any showing late kettenkrads either participating in the action or post battle at a Captured Equipment Collection Point.