Sunday, April 5, 2026

Easter Greetings

 

The Resurrection

 c. 1511-1515

Mathias Grünewald, c. 1480-1528

Note: Mathias (or Mathis) Grünewald is the subject of Hindemith's symphonic masterpiece Mathis der Maler  (Mathis the Painter).

Friday, April 3, 2026

Thursday Brief

April showers bring shorter hours.  Today's work time was shorter than usual due to heavy rain, and the radar was threatening worse to come, so I left early.  But some progress was made.

Steve Iversen continues working on the Kansas City car.  He was grinding some rust off this ventilation grill, but I just missed getting the flying sparks.


Frank Kehoe painted the frames for the new 50th Avenue signs.  They look great.


Finally, I was able to cut beam #8 to length, cut the notch, drill all the holes, and put a first coat of primer on most of it.

Meanwhile, Gregg and Jack continued work on the 109, and of course Tim was working on the (1)268, but I don't have any pictures.  Better luck next time.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Art Exhibit at IRM -- Mitch Markovitz

Let me draw your attention to an art exhibit coming to a museum near you -- the work of Mitch Markovitz.  I haven't seen him in years, but we're glad he's still going strong.  You won't want to miss it.

Link here.


Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Tuesday Activities

For the last six months or so I've been turning out third rail beams for our CA&E cars, and it may seem rather monotonous.  But I'm not done yet.  I just got the wood and started assembling the eighth one of this series.  We need to make some more cast iron parts to complete the next ones.  And that will be expensive.


Here we see #7 waiting to be painted black, while the wood for #8 has been cut to size and glued.

I paid a visit to Barn 8 to resolve a couple of problems with the beams recently installed on the 460 there, and while in the area I stopped in at the 277 to see how Steve Smunt and Paul Hough are doing.  They're doing an excellent job on the main compartment interior, and I'll get some pictures next time.  Here Steve is working on one of the window shade boxes.


Tim is finishing the floor at one end of the (1)268.


The 306 guys are making progress on the air piping; at the west end the air gauge is in place.


Now that the Kansas City PCC is in Barn 4, Steve Iversen can make further progress.  Here he shows how the tail light will be mounted.


On the other side, when the outer layer was removed, it appears the side sheets were more badly rusted than expected.  This happens with used cars all the time.  Buyer beware!


Finally, I have figured out how to repaint all sides of a beam on the same day.  #7 is done.


And that's no joke.

The Kolossus of IRM

The museum business can be rather challenging at times; it's not easy to get all the publicity we want and deserve, although we have a lot to offer, of course.  We need something new and exciting to pull in ever bigger crowds.  Our planned Visitor Center will go a long way towards fulfilling that goal, and we encourage everybody to donate what you can to its construction.  But one of our previous General Managers thought that we should also have something even more exciting and stupendous: the Kolossus of IRM!


This will be a huge concrete statue of Nick Kallas bestriding Main Street, welcoming the masses into our Museum.  It is planned to be about 120' tall, and it will certainly be the most astounding tourist attraction of its sort anywhere this side of North Korea.

Now we realize that this may not be everybody's cup of tea.  And in fact, when the idea was proposed at the most recent Board meeting, the discussion became rather heated, to say the least.  But the survivors agree that this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that we can't afford to miss.  So please donate today!   Do not send cash or stamps.  No refunds.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Ely Door Update

 Master craftsman Buzz Morisette reports:

I have an update on the doors for the Ely I have been working on.
For Pullman Weekend coming up May 2nd and 3rd, Roger and Co. have been working on the Ely along with others. I was asked to help out with some door and window problems with the car.











These double doors at the back end of the car had rotted bottoms that needed repairs as pictured. Just completed, Fritz helped me mount them today.

The other rear side door had been made by an outside sash shop as long as 30 years ago. Never painted and lost in the shuffle, apparently.  Roger located it some time back and recognized the latch hardware matching the hinges on the temporary door.
That door is still in the shop waiting for tempered glass.



Note:  IRM has by far the most comprehensive collection of Pullman cars of all types -- passenger, freight, and electric -- to be found anywhere, and you won't want to miss Pullman Weekend on May 2nd and 3rd!!

Monday, March 30, 2026

Motion Everywhere

Frank writes...


Sunday wasn't just the second day of Bunny Trolley Hop, it was a day of movement, including after the event ended.
What I spent a good part of my afternoon moving was third rail beams. The quartet of beams built by my father over the winter were taken over to Barn 8 for installation on the 460. Above is the one at the current northwest corner of the car...
...and here's the one at the northeast corner. A huge THANK YOU goes out to Greg and Good Nick, who helped install the beams. We also got the beam at the southwest corner of the car installed, but the fourth had fouled bolt holes, so that was left for remedial drilling and later installation. I strongly suspect the 460 hasn't worn third rail beams since 1962, so it's really nice to see these on the car again.
Another thing that got moved was the 453's coupler! Dan F dropped the coupler off the west end of the car and hauled it away, as shown here surrounded by the blocking used to ease it down off the car. Yours truly helped. This coupler is missing a few parts, but we have a plan to address this so that the 453 can be run in train service in the future.
And I finally remembered to test fit that 3D-printed height-adjustment plate template by trying to bolt it both to a truck frame and to one of our newly made third rail beams. I'm happy to say that it fit both perfectly, though I'll need to swap the hole positions left to right. The next step will be to send the 3D file to a couple of area foundries and fabricators to get quotes. That's the easy part - the hard part will be paying for it! And in other news, I got some more needle-chipping done on the ceiling in the 451, though it wasn't especially photogenic.

So, what else was happening? When I arrived, Norm, Jon, Dan and Jimmy (the latter two pictured here) were working on Michigan Electric 28. The 28 sits atop the trucks from long-gone North Shore combine 250, but the North Shore set the side bearings on its trucks further out from the car's center-line than was typical. Norm speculates that this may have been to reduce swaying on the 'L.' Anyway, Norm moved the side bearings on the front truck inward many years go to match the bearing plates on the car itself, but the rear truck never had this done. Until now!
Dan headed up the work to use the mag drill to drill new holes in the center bearing support brackets, then he and Greg (shown here on the left) bolted the side bearings into place in the new, correct location. The truck was then moved back under the 28 and the car was set back down, this time with all four side bearings correctly aligned.
You'll see more about this below, but Kansas City PCC 755 has shown up in Barn 4, and here we see Steve lying down on the job as he examines the steel work that will be needed at the right rear corner of the car.
Brian was hard at work on air brake stuff, as usual. Above is a completely rebuilt air gauge for the 306 that he just completed.
As part of his project to rebuild several S governors at once, he's had to fabricate a missing retainer clip for the internal filter on one governor. Above is how they're supposed to look.
And here's the replacement on the left with the original on the right. Both of those photos were taken by Brian LaKemper. In other shop news, Joel and Jimmy completed the inspection of Veracruz 19 and Joel was up to various other things, including moving spare parts out of the west end of Barn 4 and distributing first aid kits to the operating fleet.

And now, it's time for our ever-popular series, Switching Roundup! With the vast amount of equipment that is being moved around as part of the Barn 15 project, IRM is really living up to its "Museum in Motion" tagline. We start with an update from Saturday. The below photos were taken and submitted by our redoubtable roving reporter, Bill Wulfert.
Kansas City PCC 755 is the subject of a long-running restoration project, but only now is it being brought over to Barn 4 so that the crew has readier access to tools. Above, the car is seen on the tail track.
And here it is on Station Track 1 as part of a wye move. I don't think it's been to the depot since I painted the car in KCPS colors about 25 years ago, and for all I know, it's never been through the depot. As for my corn-broom paint job, I'm pleased to say that its mediocrity has held up nicely, and the quality is just as middling now as it was when the paint was fresh.
The switch crew extracted the Cleveland PCC from track 42.
The lettering and striping on this car isn't 100% done, but it's close.
And back into Barn 4 it went, but this time on track 43 instead of 42.
That opened up a new spot for the 755. Here, the diesel has run around the car and is pushing it down the west leg of the wye.
Next stop, Central Avenue! One of these years, the 755 will hopefully be calling at this same spot, but under its own power and full of passengers.
And into the work barn it goes.
Here's a very happy Steve next to the car.
The front of Barn 4 is now far too modern for my tastes, between two PCCs and a pair of Budd 'L' cars, but what can you do?

With that, let us progress to Sunday. Although I was on the property, I was busy messing around with third rail beams and couplers and neglected to get any photos of the fun. The focus for the day was extracting the AEM7 from the west end of track 52. The AEM7 was the recipient of enough donations to purchase it indoor storage space, so it's going into Barn 15.
Here's an unusual sight, courtesy of Brian LaKemper: a train of lightweight passenger cars in Yard 6.
This photo by Jeron Glander shows track 52 completely emptied out.
And the final result, in a photo by Brian LaKemper, has a pair of IC Highliners at the west end of track 52 in the spot formerly occupied by the AEM7. All four Highliners are lined up on this track, in fact, with the two most recently operational ones to the east, where they can more easily be extracted.

Movie Review

Two thumbs up for "Off His Trolley": https://ia801601.us.archive.org/25/item ... LEY.ia.mp4This is a very educational guide from 1924 on how not to operate streetcars, disguised as a Mack Sennett comedy, and recently restored.  They just don't make them like they used to.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Saturday in the Shop

On Saturday I was running the 714 and 749 for the Bunny Hop event.  Derek White was the conductor and we were the only mainline train.  Basically everything went well, and I was too busy to get any pictures.  But you've all seen the North Shore cars before.  Whether attendance for the event met expectations I couldn't say; our passengers all seemed to be in a good mood.

But during a brief lunch break I managed to get a few pictures of the projects in the shop.

Frank K. is making new sign frames for 50th Avenue.  They look great.

Buzz was carefully painting the new door for the Ely.

Bill showed me the parts we have for the roll sign mechanisms from the CA&E St. Louis cars.  More on that later.

The signal department got evicted from the office building, as we have explained, so here Mike Alterio and John Naglich were working on some signal parts in the car shop.  They were busy, so I didn't stop to ask them exactly what it was.

Steve continued fighting the recalcitrant PCC brake actuators.  He too was busy.

I didn't even have time to venture into the barn to see what was going on there.

And later, just as I was leaving the property, another huge and photogenic switch move started.  But I was too hungry to stay around.  Sorry!!

Friday, March 27, 2026

Green Bay 109 Update

Our indefatigable investigative reporter, Gregg Wolfersheim, is back at it, relaying news about progress on the Green Bay car. I think we can all agree that at this point, thanks to the amount of time it's spent in the Electric Car Shop, it's really an electric car. That's how that works, right?


Here we see Jack putting the trim over the North side of the 109. Last week he did the south side. Each piece had to be custom fitted to the side and existing vertical trim, this took all day!

Inside, the hanging kerosene light fixture is finally up. We located some fonts which are of two different styles.

And, we now have heat at the east end of the car. We still need to apply a sheet metal heat deflector behind both stoves and then reinstall the guard rails.

I removed the painted over upper sash to get at the stained glass. The railroad had soldered a metal sheet over the inside of the colored glass. I removed it and then cleaned up the area.

This is from the outside looking against the interior lighting 

After stripping the paint from the inner sash, I put it back in. Here's the view from the inside.

We only have about half of the hardware for the sash latches. Some were twisted like this one. Jack and I straightened most of them today. Several were reinstalled, with a few more to go next week. I'll have more pics as we finish them up.