Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Pneumatic News

Thanks again to our ABBC, or Air Brake Bureau Chief, Brian LaKemper, who sends along a report of this past weekend's activities in the land of pneumatics.


This weekend was more of the same in several ways.
A fourth S-16 Governor finished assembly, and I started assembling a fifth. This is the line of governors ready to set pressures and test. The one most recently completed is destined for CA&E 451.
This is where I got assembling the fifth S-16. I can't install the piston yet, as it's ring is currently stuck. This one, and the piston from the sixth S-16 will both need their piston rings freed before they can be completed. 

I didn't take photos but I finished converting the base for the fifth S-16 to an S-16C by threading the previously blanked hole for a spitter fitting. This governor is ultimately intended to be installed in our other running curve-sider, CA&E 460.

I started taking apart the seventh S-16 (this batch will total nine). I neglected to get photos, but it looked more or less like the others that have been taken apart so far.
Will finished rebuilding a Christensen straight air valve for CSL 144 and that was installed. We took the old valve from 144 and opened it, shown here. We'll get this one cleaned up and on the shelf ready for use again. I forgot to get a photo of the new valve installed in 144.
I also swapped tips on some of the finger bases for the S-16s that are still in the queue for assembly, here is a worn one next to a new one.

Wednesday Brief

And this will be brief.  But we'll start with some interesting news.  On Wednesday morning we received a very useful gift from a generous donor: a complete, like new, welding set.  I don't know enough about welding to tell you very much, but the pictures speak for themselves.  I helped him unload his truck and put the cart back together.


It includes a large supply of welding rods.


We greatly appreciate donations like this, and I'm sure we'll be able to put it to good use.  (I took a BOCES class in welding back in 1980 or so, but I've forgotten just about everything I ever learned, and I suppose the art of welding has progressed a lot since then.)  I'm sure we'll be able to profit from this donation, since we have a lot of experts in this field.  Our Museum can find use for almost any sort of mechanical tools or equipment, and your donations will always be appreciated!

The rest of the day I spent mostly on the third rail beams again.  

And several of the others were at work on their projects, as usual.  But I didn't get any pictures.  Sorry!

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Doodlebug Dispatch

Our faithful freelance reporter, Gregg Wolfersheim, is hard at work on Union Pacific doodlebug M-35 once again, and he's sent along this report of recent progress.


Following up with our last report, the big red tank on the doodlebug has been identified!

With the removal of the rear train door, paint stripping commenced. Here, Jack is needle chipping the doorway.

A closeup of the area. The yellow steps in the back are part of the new mezzanine addition in the Diesel shop.

The doorway now has primer on it.

Meanwhile, the door has been partially sanded and the loose joints have had epoxy applied to strengthen them up.

The floor plate was removed and the area below it was cleaned up. One of the buffer spring assemblies has been removed for repairs.

The pocket has been reattached and is ready for the springs standing upright behind it. Damp proof red primer has also been applied to everything.

The left side door is now being stripped and getting its epoxy treatment. Jack also has made measurements of this door. We will have to create an opposite version for the right side. Many years ago it was falling apart. Sometime in the 1980s, it was removed. Probably someone had intentions to rebuild it. However, we don't know where it went, hence a new one needs to be made.

Simms Collection -- Illinois Terminal

The IT collection consists of a variety of pictures of various sorts.  Captions on the back are in quotes.

MAIN LINE


RH: Fan trip with the 277, at Monticello, I believe


RH: Probably the same

RH: Same fan trip at Champaign

Parlor car 535

"Illinois Terminal
Granite City, Illinois
Red, blue trimming used as an
experiment with this one car      
Color scheme not considered satis-
factory"                                          

"Alton, Illinois
3-car passenger train used
at evening rush hour"






At Springfield     1947

Peoria


"A VIEW SHOWING THE BARNS AT PEORIA, ILLINOIS."
RH: Car 273, unsure of number of Class B, probably 1569.


IVDIV -  CO&P


"Ch. Ottawa & Peoria
Lunch car
Orange & Black"


CO&P #56


RH:  CO&P #81


CO&P #82


"Rockdale, Ill. Sept. 23, 1933 C&IV R.R.
CHICAGO & ILLINOIS VALLEY R.R. #69"
Photo by Ed Frank, Jr.

"Aug. 4, 1934  C&IV R.R. at Ottawa, Ill.
OLDEST EQUIPMENT of Chi. & Ill. Valley"
(RH: #56, lettered "Westclox Special")

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Beaming with Pride

 OK, I admit I get some of my best jokes from Tim.  Nonetheless, it's true that we're beaming with pride here at IRM.  Here's just a few pictures from Monday.

First, let's stop in at the new office section.  The contractors are making good progress, and soon you'll be able to make your generous contributions to the Visitor Center here.

The young guys were nice enough to move two complete beams from down at the end of Bruneau Drive to the car shop.  I needed another shoe assembly, and with a little Kroil the nuts come off pretty easily.


It was wire-wheeled, given a coat of primer, and bolted to the beam.  Thanks to Gerry for torching loose one of the bolts holding the fuses.


I mortised the holes for the bolts in the next two beams.


Another view of the next summer beam:  


Several other projects were in progress, as usual.  Here Tim has installed new window sills in the (1)268.



Monday, May 4, 2026

Pullman Sunday

Frank writes...


Besides being the second day of a successful Pullman Weekend, Sunday was a day for various random projects for me, all of them involving the CA&E fleet.
The first project was working on third rail beams. Ted and I loaded the first two completed beams for the 409 - it was Pullman weekend, after all! - onto a wagon and took them over to the car, which at the moment is on display in Barn 6 while its air compressor is rebuilt by the motor shop. After a bit of arguing with recalcitrant bolts, we got both beams installed.
I then masked and painted the bolt heads and the new metal clips that my father installed to hold the ribbon fuses in place. These are "summer" beams, with the sleet scrapers removed for servicing over at Wheaton Shop. As far as you know.
Continuing with the theme, we retrieved the last four third rail beams from the east end of Bruneau Drive. Thanks to Ted and Greg for their help with this. Two of these beams are still complete; one set of shoe hardware will go onto the last of the "summer" beams that my father constructed for the 409, while the other set of shoe hardware will go onto the first beam for the 451. The sleet scraper hardware from both these beams will be installed on new beams for the 451. The other two beams we retrieved, shown above, already had their shoe hardware harvested for the 409, so I removed the sleet scraper components for use o the 451 and threw out the badly deteriorated wooden beams.
Here's a detail you may not have noticed: the sleet scraper blades include copper shunts so they can be used for power pickup in addition to their mechanical ice-removal function. The CA&E thought of everything.
Later in the afternoon, Jimmy, Ted, and I trooped over to Barn 8 for a switch move. The goal was to put the 36, previously buried behind the other three wood cars, at the door so we can easily access it. The current plan is to pull the trailer truck out from under the 36 sometime soon so that we can remove and replace its leaf springs. A temporary shop truck will support the car while this work progresses. Here, the 36 sees the sun for the first time in a while - maybe a year or so? - with the other three cars in the background.
Finally, in the evening, Good Nick mixed up a bit of red paint for me and I touched up the two doors for the 460. This isn't precisely the right color - we're still working on an exact match - but it's very close, and we want to get the 460 back in service. The paint takes a few days to dry and cure, but these doors should be ready to reinstall on the car by next weekend, and then the 460 will be cleared for service.
So, what else was happening? The big project for the weekend involved the Electroliner, which was brought over to Barn 4 for motor repair. On Saturday, one joint in the train was jacked up and the truck pulled out to the side. This allowed one of the motors, which had a failed gearbox, to be removed and for repairs to be made. By the wee hours of Sunday morning, the repairs were complete and the truck was back under the train. On Sunday, Zach, JD, and Lou worked on reattaching motor leads and other reassembly work. Above, Zach drills new cotter pin holes in bolts that secure the motors to the support brackets.
And GB&W 109 wasn't being worked on, but it had been shoved out the east end of Barn 4 to provide some open space inside the barn for extracting the 'Liner's truck out to the side. Everyone's favorite railroad coach does look nice in the sunlight, doesn't it? Fortunately for all involved, it's not leaving the Electric Car Shop permanently, and it was shoved back into the barn late on Sunday. It's been in Barn 4 for 338 days, but who's counting?

Simms Collection -- Indiana Railroad Fan Trip

On May 19, 1940, shortly before the Indiana Railroad went out of business, a group of interurban enthusiasts chartered a fan trip with three of the IRR's famous high-speed lightweight interurban cars - numbers 65, 57, and 58.  A three-car train was highly unusual in regular service, and it was not long afterwards that two of the cars were scrapped.  But this trip had far-reaching consequences.

Howard Odinius was one of the organizers of the group on this trip, and his efforts to preserve car 65 led to the foundation of the Illinois Railway Museum and the eventual preservation of 500 more pieces of railroad equipment, plus buildings, signs, documents, and everything else. So let's climb aboard!


3-car fan special on Terre Haute line


5/19/40   Eaton, Ind.


New Castle, Ind.



Muncie, Ind.
Nickel Plate RR.


Indianapolis

Between Muncie & New Castle