Chicago sports fans surely want to send Green Bay packing this weekend, but here in the Electric Car Shop we have our own little green and yellow piece of Wisconsin, Green Bay & Western steam railroad coach 109 - and our intrepid cub reporter Gregg Wolfersheim is on the sidelines with the latest. Gregg, over to you!
Hicks Car Works
News and views of progress at the Illinois Railway Museum
Friday, December 5, 2025
Green Bay Car Report
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Frank Hicks
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5:00 PM
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Thursday, December 4, 2025
Another Busy Wednesday
Posted by
Randall Hicks
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10:19 AM
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Monday, December 1, 2025
The New-Fallen Snow
Frank writes...
After that, it was back to the car shop. A huge thank you goes out to Richard, who got the pattern for our first reproduction third rail beam casting ready. I worked for a little while on cleaning it up so it's ready to go to the foundry.
This is the piece that bolts to the underside of the third rail beam. Holes will be drilled out so that the shoe can hang from this using links. We are getting seven of these cast because that's how many we will need in order to make the rest of our fleet complete.
Our old friend Steve was visiting from Oklahoma, and he spent the better part of the day putting a coat of primer on our CSL air compressor wagon, AX545. Above is how it looked when I arrived...
...and here's how it looked when I left. Pretty spiffy! After priming is complete, the next step, of course, is a coat of CSL work car green.
Jimmy and Greg made more progress on NJT 4. The Allen bit we ordered came in, so they were able to remove both wheels from the left side of the rear truck. Here, Jimmy is removing one of those Allen bolts. Both of these wheels need a bit of work before the new, wide-tread wheels can go on - one has a bracket that will get installed before the new wheel makes access difficult, while the other wheel had a stud that loosened and came out, so that will need to be reinstalled. We also came up with a plan for removing the frozen bolts from the #1 left wheel. It's coming along!
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Frank Hicks
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10:09 PM
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Friday, November 28, 2025
A Trip on the Happy Holiday Railway
Frank writes...
Before our trip, we toured the Model Railroad Exhibit and the new "Jingle Junction" heated tent where Mrs. Claus was welcoming kids and Bob Opal was playing festive tunes on the piano. Of course we also went through Barn 6, which Jim Ward has decorated with an incredible 800-foot illuminated pathway said to contain over 100,000 lights. The above photo doesn't do it justice, but it does include the 319, which is wintering in Barn 6 for a change.
As soon as our Santa train trip ended, before we were even off the platform, the fireworks show began. Here's the view of the 749, one of the two "streetcars" in service, stopped at Depot Street with a burst visible in the background.
We viewed most of the fireworks show from the lawn behind the depot. As with last year, it was a really impressive display! The fireworks show is only this first weekend. Unfortunately, HHR has been cancelled for tomorrow (Saturday) due to the dire weather forecasts, but additional trips have been added on December 19th and on Saturdays in December to compensate. Make sure to tell your friends to get their tickets now!
Posted by
Frank Hicks
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10:29 PM
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Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Kewaunee Green Bay & Western 64 Update
We were afraid we would have had to say a sad goodbye to our favorite wooden steam road coach by now, but we've lucked out, and KGB&W 64 - aka GB&W 109 - is still being worked on in the Barn 4 Electric Car Shop! Truly, our cup runneth over. And our intrepid cub reporter, Gregg Wolfersheim, is on the case with another progress report.
Posted by
Frank Hicks
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9:56 PM
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Monday, November 24, 2025
Sunday Report
Frank writes...
The three bolts hold this small casting, whose technical term is a "glottis," against the shoe hanger casting. The shunt from the third rail pickup shoe is clamped down by this thing, and then the current passes through the fuse, which is held in by the top bolt. "CA&E" and a number starting with "3" is stamped into the back. My best guess is that this thing is bronze.
And here's the shoe hanger with new nuts and bolts. We'll want to replace the shunt and fuse later, obviously just for the sake of appearance, but now the bolts can be loosened and those components easily swapped out.
I also sand-blasted this spare grid box end casting (actually, I think this one originally came from the 321).
It was then primed. I'd like to have a spare grid box "kit" on hand for the next time we have a grid failure. In theory, we ought to be able to pull a box off a car, disassemble it, wire-wheel the contact faces on the grid elements, and reassemble the whole thing in about a day. As a practical matter, it tends to take a couple of weeks, but that's largely because we don't have all the components (like mica tubes) already on hand and because it takes time to clean up and paint these castings.
On Saturday, the #1L wheel was removed from NJT 4, though it was necessary to torch off the two obstinate bolt heads to do it. They've since been drilled out, so I assume the plan is to use an Easy-Out to try and remove them.
Also on Saturday, Mike and another volunteer were doing more wire-wheeling on our CSL air compressor wagon, AX545. The roof is now cleaned up, so if they have more work to do before they start priming the thing, it can't be very extensive.
Zach and Brian were working on stenciling the grid covers for the inside of IT 1565, our "Class B" boxcab locomotive. We tried spraying these a few weeks ago, but with the overspray, it didn't look right. Above, Zach is having much better luck by painstakingly painting them by hand using a pounce brush. At bottom left is a test piece that was used to refine the method. The key is to keep only a small amount of paint on the brush so that it doesn't run in under the stencil.
The above and below photos were taken by Zach. Above, the curtain is drawn back...
...and voila! That's pretty sharp!
Finally, I spent a while helping Richard move buses, though in the end only one got moved because the next two that were intended to be "switched" refused to start. I remarked to Richard that I'm a bad luck charm - the buses must like me about as much as I like them! But no matter; we also took the more modern of the two Janesville buses, the one that will be used as a "Fill the Bus" food pantry collection site for the CARE Center in Marengo during our Happy Holiday Railway event, over to the other end of the property to get refueled.
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Frank Hicks
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10:20 PM
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Monday, November 17, 2025
The Great Third Rail... Beam Project
Frank writes...
Later, I went over to Barn 8, used a jack to hold one of the 308's third rail beams in place, and unbolted it so I could remove these two bits. The plate on the left, which is a 5"x6" piece of 10-gauge steel, acts as a large washer, and there's one at each end of each beam where they bolt to the truck. On the right is a 6"x6-1/2"x3/4" steel plate with ridges that mesh into identical ridges on the trucks. These also go at both ends of each third rail beam, but on the back where the beams meet the truck. The idea here was that the height of each beam could be adjusted up and down easily in 1/4" increments, which was helpful to account for wheel wear. This isn't something we have to worry about at IRM, of course. I took measurements of both these items so we can start looking into options for replicating them for our new third rail beams.
There was a lot of activity around the property getting ready for Happy Holiday Railway. Lights are going up all over the place and Christmas music was even being piped over the loudspeaker system in the afternoon as our tech folks checked all the speakers. Jim W. was hard at work putting up an extraordinary quantity of lights and other decorations in Barn 6. For the car shop's part, we had to move the line of storage cars currently occupying the connector track north about 30' or so because they want to spot the Belt caboose just north of the ruling curve on the streetcar line. It will presumably be festooned with lights once it's in place. Above, the first car to move was the TM container car.
Then a few of us pushed the next car, CTA 2008 (masquerading as "1992"), up to the container car. With its roller bearings, it moved easily and we didn't even need a car mover. This car is not part of the historic collection and is being stripped for parts.
In other news, Mike S. has been hard at work on our CSL air compressor wagon, AX545. It looks like virtually the entire thing except for the roof has now been needle-chipped and/or wire-wheeled.
Here's Nick again, this time testing the specific gravity of batteries for our CTA 2200s.
Hiccup number one was that some of the inner bolts on wheel #1 didn't want to budge. Here's Richard applying some heat, though with a rubber spacer so nearby, this could only be done sparingly. Unfortunately, two of the bolts just did not want to move, and on this wheel they were so close to the wheel hub that the impact drive wouldn't fit onto the bolt. Photo by Ted Kuhn.
After quite a bit of fighting, the guys started working on wheel #2, the left wheel on the second axle. For unknown reasons, this had a different size axle, so the impact drive fit just fine over the inside ring of bolts. Photo by Ted Kuhn.
In just a few minutes, the wheel came off. Here you can see a rubber spacer. By this time it was late, so work was suspended until the following weekend.
A week ago now, I came out to find that the guys had been hard at work that Saturday. Unfortunately, they had come up against hiccup number two. In the above photo, near the left and just to the right of that spring you can see the end of the "torque arm." Surrounding it are some bolts, though they're missing in this photo. These bolts clear a narrow-tread wheel just fine, but they foul a wide-tread wheel (the new wheel is seen to the right, of course). Now, Shaker Heights solved this by using bolts with heads ground down to a thinner profile. Unfortunately, on NJT 4, these aren't bolts, they're studs. And grinding down a stud with a nut on it is not a great plan if it means only a couple of threads are still engaged. The solution? Drill out the studs and replace them with bolts.
And voila: on Sunday, wheel #2 is completed and the new wide-tread wheel is installed. On Saturday, the guys drilled out those studs and installed bolts that clear the wheel. One down, seven to go.
So here's Jimmy working on wheel #4, the left wheel on the #4 axle, this weekend. Notice anything different? If you answered "are those Allen bolts?!?" you would be correct - the inner ring of bolts on this truck, for reasons I cannot fathom, uses Allen bolts. We have a drive for these on order. Stay tuned; with time, all the wheels on NJT 4 should be replaced, at which point we'll give it a thorough mechanical and electrical inspection. If everything's in good shape - and for a PCC that has sat for nearly 25 years, that's a big if - then it may be due for some testing to see whether we can put it into service.
Posted by
Frank Hicks
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10:12 PM
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