Fire tubes, hmmm. Probably a lot of reasons including habit, efficency, driver comfort, restrictive boiler code, reserve boiler energy.
The classical water wall loco boiler is the style used exclusivley on silver soldered or brazed copper boilers (under 25 litres by the code and under 6" by practicality) Over that size the boilers are usually welded steel and most people use a design known as Briggs for the firebox. Difficult to describe without pictures

but basically instead of a continuous water cavity around the firebox they use vertical tubes on a manifold around the sides and usually nothing but a steel plate on the backhead. Usual practice is to pack the gaps with fireclay.
Personally I really dislike this idea, the sides and rear of the firebox can glow a dull red at night with the lack of continuous water cooling, this is great in Tassie in the middle of winter, it keeps your toes and other more important bits nice and toasty. Anywhere warmer than that, and the boiler becomes very unplesant to sit behind with the radiant heat. My biggest beef is that the water tubes are very difficult to inspect adequatley on the bi annual boiler inspection. I am a boiler inspector under training with my club ATM so I am learning more and more about this as I go along.
Water level trip; there is provision in the code to fit fusible plugs to the firebox crown sheet however it is not mandatory mainly because it is difficult to make reliable plugs in minature and the boiler must be well maintained / clean of scale for the plugs to be reliable.
I will not be using them in my boiler, I will rely on myself to maintain the water level. With the threat of having to make a new boiler if I stuff up. Being silver soldered, the expected failure mode is the crown stays soften then pull through collapsing the crown. Having said this, it is very unusual to leave a boiler unattended for more than 5 mins and even then the owner is always in hearing distance for safety valves.
Personally I am very interested in kero firing, I like the idea of a clean burning fuel and I also have access to ample waste aviation turbine fuel

I need to find some info on reliable burner systems that will scale down..
The Wagga trip I try to make is in November however with the new addition to the garage (the Brumby ) and the EJ driveline mod comming the minister for war and finance has decreed there will be no interstate trips till the ute is finished... and I still have not found a good Liberty driveline yet.
Forums, I am a subscriber to COALS - conversations of Australian live steamers. It has been quiet lately, but there is a lot of experience lurking there. Including the chairman and secretary of the AMBSC - Australian minature boiler safety comittee. The group who maintain the code our bilers are made to
I also keep half an eye on yahoo groups ; Steam_tech, TheTeslaturbineList, SAR_Livesteam, live-steam, live_steam. Like all old forums they can be quite stagnant with general chit chat but there i usually some very bright people lurking aswell.
Running at 100 PSI the firetube boiler heems to be the most efficent, but I am always open to design ideas. My little 'Tich' is running on air, so I always have the option of making it a test bed for different ideas. Main potential sticking point is whatever the design I need to be able to make it fit in the code. Luckily the inspector I am training under is very flexiable and the Boiler code has the catch all clause of ; It if is not in the code but not specifically prohibited then I have the option to goto AS 1200 and 1228
