Al Reinschmidt was able to attend the Soirée last night, and sends us these pictures of the gala event. Looks like a good time was had by all. Supply your own captions. (And I have no idea what "Midwestern Alphabet" is supposed to mean....)
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Saturday, February 25, 2017
Big and Small
First, we have contest results, and we have a winner! A few weeks ago, we asked what this device might be:
And it turns out it's a clamp for holding spare tools for our big lathe, and it is now in use. The Steam Dept. guys found the other pieces to the puzzle, and it looks like this. Bob Sundelin wins the prize of an all expenses paid vacation for two to beautiful Kishwaukee Grove, where you and a guest can watch the crew change ends and prepare to return to East Union. What could be better than that???
Buzz shows off the patterns for new aluminum window guard holders for the 65.
The big news in the wood shop, I suppose, was the Arrival of the Guests from the steam shop, who had a huge block of wood that needed to be machined for use as a replacement end beam for the Shay. This is bigger than a standard railroad tie, and had to be run through the jointer numerous times to get one straight edge, and so on until it was ready for use. Buzz says this took about three hours, but the results were better than expected. Handling such a big piece of wood is very difficult and takes lots of hands.
I always like to take pictures of other railfans taking pictures of the action. In this case it's Dan and Victor who are recording the progress.
You'll notice our CFO is keeping a close eye on things to make sure nothing is wasted.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the shop, all by himself, Mike Stauber continues to rebuild doors for the Kansas City PCC.
And Bill Wulfert is rebuilding third rail beams for the L cars.
And Tim says that these are window frames numbers 85 and 86 out of 88 required for the 1754.
You'll never guess what I was doing.
It's going well: we now have at least a first finish coat of the correct red on the ceiling, the two sides, and the inner wall, and all that needs to be finished is the outer wall, with the windows, the various control parts, and so on, but it's nice to feel some accomplishment. Finally.
We have a conundrum here: the brass latches on the drop sash are bare brass, which doesn't look quite right. Basically everything else in the compartment was painted in the final red scheme. This appears to be a Clevelandism to me, but I'm not really sure. The corresponding parts in the 409 and the 460 are also unpainted. On the other hand, these parts in the 431 are painted, and I think Jeff was always careful to do things correctly. On the other hand, there's no guarantee that every car was done the same way. I think I will put off repainting the drop sash until I come up with a more definite answer.
And finally, while the paint was drying, I went to the parts car and, after testing several candidates, was able to find a cutout cock for the 309 (#1 end, control pipe) which is much better than the one currently in place.
It was cold and windy today, so it seems to be a good time to go to Florida. I might even come back eventually. If I do, I'll let you know.
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
You'll Be Seeing Red
Red has a huge number of possible shades and hues, and matching it can be quite difficult, depending upon the lighting and viewing angle, etc. I think I finally have a good match for the external color on the 319, which is what we'll want for the final coats in the vestibules. In this picture, it's the middle part of the trim piece; the rest of it was a previous version of red. After a couple of tries, it looks pretty good to me.
The weather today was good for painting. Here's the ceiling of the left side:
And on the right side, over the motorman's position:
And the electrical cabinet door section:
Well, that was almost blinding, wasn't it? I didn't spend much time over at Barn 4, but here's an interesting view of a couple of new helpers.
Assisting Norm and Jeff on the 28 are two volunteers who are welders at the Belvidere Chrysler plant. They're temporarily laid off while the plant is being retooled, so they're helping put together a different kind of car so their skills don't get rusty. Sorry, I should have written down their names. Maybe next time.
Here a new section of steel plate is getting a test fit.
In the morning, we had a Car Dept. meeting for the Wednesday crew, and discussed upcoming projects. There are several relatively minor items that need to be addressed on some of the streetcars, such as 972, 141, 144, etc. and we talked about wheels for the 68 and other such things. For my cars, we are probably going to need to have some new motor axle bearings cast, and we talked about what needs to be done to create a pattern. Frank Sirinek knows a place that may be able to cast bearings, so he'll help by talking to them. This could be expensive, so we might start begging for money.
And then speaking of wheels, here are a couple of North Shore wheelsets from the recently acquired spare trucks. As was pointed out at the meeting, you do NOT want to try rolling individual wheelsets over the pit: they can easily start angling to one side and wind up falling straight down. That wouldn't get good. This has been today's public service announcement.
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Safety First
Yesterday was unseasonably warm, so most of the day was spent in sanding and painting.
But first, we have news of a new invention from the Hicksco Laboratories. The CA&E steel cars are equipped with special Tomlinson couplers. These have the advantage over the Van Dorn design that there are no loose parts that might be missing, but on the other hand they are very difficult to uncouple. The standard process requires two qualified people in addition to the motorman, one on each side, to reach in between the buffers and pull the uncoupling chain while the cars are separated. And that chain requires a great deal of force.
This is a problem due to the typical labor shortage: it's usually not easy to find two qualified members to show up just to help uncouple two cars. It also involves some risk, which we would like to avoid. So these couplers are very unpopular.
Our answer is a wooden frame which can hold the uncoupling chain out to put the coupler in the release position. It needs a little more adjustment, but this should make it possible for a single motorman to uncouple cars, and no one needs to put himself in danger. This one is shown on the 431.
Once one has been made for the 409, we should be able to actually test them.
The 451 and 460 are equipped with chains and levers so that the couplers can be released while standing clear of the cars. This was an improvement in terms of safety, but still requires three people. We'll have to look into this next.
Mostly I was working on the vestibule of the 319, but there was one door in the 36 that still needed blue. Here's the first coat. Now there's only some lettering to complete at the #2 end.
And I keep picking away at the 319. The pull switch for the buzzer cord is back in place.
I didn't get over to the shop to see what the others were doing, so sorry, you'll just have to use your imagination. However, some of them came over to barn 8 to check the compressor on the M-15. This one has two motors on the same shaft, so that it could easily be switched between 600V and 1200V. According to our roster, this is a D3-N CC4.
And all the barn doors were opened to air out the barns in the balmy weather.
Thursday, February 16, 2017
An Interview with Bob Bruneau
Frank writes...
These are excerpts from a tape recorded interview I did with Bob Bruneau on December 3, 2003. I've edited out my questions and some content not relevant to the interview.
[I joined IRM in] 1956 because we got the IT cars. I came up with the money for the 101. I said I'd [also] donate a hundred dollars. Then they tried to cheat me out of another hundred dollars. They said "You said two hundred dollars!" …Our car [the 277] fell apart on the P&PU [Peoria & Pekin Union]. It was running “rear end of train only;” they pulled the front coupler out. [We asked:] "How'd you do that?" [They said:] "Well, it's not very strong, they only had 67 cars behind it!" It has a wood frame. So atNorth Chicago I was able
to do some repair before we moved it. I'm surprised they didn't pull 101 in
half! Then the 415 came in August of '56, I think, and 1702 came in '58, I
think, the Birney came in '59, the Class B came from Champaign powerhouse. It
was 60525 for Illinois Power Company. They had a Class A there when I was
taking pictures; they must have bought it [the Class B] in the fifties. Late '55 or '56. There was two of them [Class
B's] around, one at Danville, too, 1566. Well, maybe there was two in Danville ... two in a
junkyard. I don't think ours was in a junkyard. And, for one of the good stories
about 1565, they [IRM] were going to move it in the winter. Big coal piles
around and a coal stove and they were freezing their asses off pulling [motor]
brushes. And they also, the other good thing they did was bring plywood sheets
down and nail them over all the windows. So they cracked every window in the
locomotive! [Laughs] How's that for class? They would have been better off
letting the kids bust them; they wouldn't have gotten so many. I don't know if
they broke all of them. The windows were broken and there were nails going into
the frames. I don't know if every piece of glass in the doors was broken.
Well I worked on 101 a lot. Borrowed two tarps off of small trailers. In my stupidity. Trailers used to be round on the end. A lot of the trailers in those days were open-top; they just had car lines. And there's pictures - I don't have them - of 101 [that] says "Weber Cartage" on both ends. [Laughs] I think I worked on 415 because it didn't have any mothers. Ray Neuhaus was the President, I think. We sandblasted the 277 and painted it. Between the inner and outer windows was full of sand and finally I talked him into letting me work on that - [getting] the sand out. It was all wet sand, it stayed wet on the window sills. They had one of these big Coke tanks, you know, when you put your money in there and then they release a gate to slide your bottle around and pull it out. And the water was always green and slimy in there. And they had a drain cock on the thing; you had to fill it up with buckets, and it was a real loose one, trying to pick the kind of pop you wanted out of there. Somebody would bump the drain cock with their leg, and you'd walk by the car and it's leaking water out of the floor. So when I really - when we were moving [to Union], I got a couple of my buddies, and I can't remember who they were, and pitched it out the baggage door onto the ground. Help pay for the move. In the front of 277 on days like this when it was snowing, snow would blow in under the inside wall around the front. So I had a guy, Mattie Dalvo, from the North Shore, and all we had was a little table saw. How are you going to cut this part, with a quarter-round on the front? "Oh, that's easy," he says. He just takes the thing [makes sweeping motion with hands] RRRRROOOWW, tipped it right on 45 degrees, RRRRROOOWW - and there it was! A big block of wood with a radius on it, angled. I mean, it's crude as hell, I caulked the hell out of it.
…Odinius - he was a practical joker. And Bob Selle was working on the Singer engine that's down at Noblesville, and so Odinius gets me over by the Three-Spot, which was a sweeper body, double-truck sweeper body with a big door in the middle. That was the company shop. There wasn't much room in there. So he [Odinius] says "When I nod my head, unplug the cord. When I nod it again, plug it back in." [I ask:] "What's going on?" [Odinius says:] "Just do it and don't let anybody see you." So Selle's about 75 feet away with a couple of extension cords drilling holes. Howard nods his head so I unplug the thing. Bob looks around, checks the cords, yeah, they're all plugged in; [he] didn't come in the Three-Spot. Howard nods his head; [Selle] goes back, tries the electric drill, it runs. He starts drilling the hole again and he [Howard] nods his head again and I unplug it. And he's [Selle's] looking around - "What the f---'s going on?" Howard's got the extension cord like a garden hose, you know, folded in half, and the guy thinks he's - "Cut that out, Howard!" "What, what?" "You're cutting off my electricity!" He nods his head: "I am?" He lets go of the cord and I plug the thing in and it runs and then he nods and we do it again! I had to unplug it and the guy was going nuts! The other one was Jim Fox, he'd always like to play tricks on him. Especially in the restaurant, there was a strip there with all sailors and we'd go in there for lunch. Odinius would always get a dinner; it was a typical Greek restaurant. They always had peas, and Howard would always try and sit in the booth next to one of the Foxes. He'd take his spoon and he'd be shooting peas all the time! So Fox decided, "Well, I'll sit next to him and he can't do that to me any more." So Howard would be talking, stirring his coffee - and he had real hot coffee - and he's just talking, put his spoon on Jim's arm - "YEOW!" They had these hand-towel machines in there, you know, pull the towel down and dry your hands. One day some guys come walking in, towel machines under their arms, and we heard "crash, boom, bang!" And they walk out with no towel machines. The owner's all "bliblibliblibli" - Greek. They smashed the two towel machines off the wall and put their towel machines in, you know, the mob was still into all this. They'd just come in and blast the other towel guys' machines to smithereens off the wall, big holes in the plaster, and put their machines on. Now you had to buy from them! Next step was getting your legs broken or something.
[Regarding the move to Union:] Yeah, I didn't ride the trains but I, being out of work, and because of the move, I was there six days a week and I'd go back from Union Sunday night with whoever's going back to Chicago and then I'd recover for a day and Tuesday morning I'd hop the North Western back to Downey's and walk to the Museum. I built three ramps for the different cars; eight streetcars. Tore up track, sanded journals. We had an air line from the [CHF] factory that came out, inch and a quarter pipe, and the three wood baggage cars we had he [Frank Sherwin] gave us; some of that was just the right length, you know - taking the air line apart on the ground and screwing it into the car! Stopped the leaks. Junked a lot of stuff - roaring fires there [North Chicago] all the time. We got two electric locomotives from [Commonwealth] Edison, and two cranes, and two gons full of parts. To pay for the move, I had to scrap stuff. I sent brand new traction motors to scrap that were still in boxes. That hurt. We had a little woodenNorth Shore
boxcar, probably 32 foot or something, scrapped. It was all full of stuff. We
had a whole bunch of paint windows from the IT. They just had windows that
they'd stick them in the car and paint the car and take the windows out. In the
meantime, somebody else was painting the real windows in the shop and they'd
just trade the windows out. Did they burn with all that paint on them! Some of
them still had the hardware; I was stripping that stuff and throwing them in
the fire.
I don't remember if there was four or five trains [going to Union]. But you had to do all the figuring out, you know. Go from MCB coupler to an MCB adapter to plug into a Van Dorn car and then a Van Dorn to a Tomlinson on the 431, and back to a Van Dorn and back to an MCB. See, there's some "L" cars in there plus the 309. [The 321 got a drawbar pulled out] right here in Union, by our interchange. A hose burst when they made a brake application - the back half of the train stopped and the front half kept going, for a little bit. The diesel didn't stop as fast. I forget what we did, how we got that off the railroad. Well, what happened, to move out here we bought a bunch of ties from theNorth Shore , two-fifty apiece. They had to be
ten years or newer. And so we bought rail right around there to move out here;
we didn't have any rail. We'd switch the stuff out on the North Shore property,
tear up the track Saturday, have it back down here [Union] because the train
comes Sunday evening and it's going back on the same track! Of course the North
Western was a pretty rinky-dinky thing out here; the [Belvidere] Chrysler plant
wasn't built; ten mile-an-hour track and all the boxcars were [swaying] as they
went by. A big freight was ten cars. [They'd say] "You're getting the cars
whether your track's in or not!" So everybody had to really hustle. We
hired some men from the IC - two bucks an hour, and we'd all chip in. I think
there was four of them - Sammy and his boys. They were section gang guys. We
couldn't keep them busy. Somebody [would say] "Let's go to the
saloon." "No, stay here, we'll get some more of them." So
somebody else would go to the saloon and put a six-pack down between them, you
know, they were sitting on the grass. Get another rail, a couple rail lengths,
rails sitting on top of the ties. so we made it every week.
We had to be out of [North Chicago] by the first of July. So the streetcars weren't out, but all the rest of it was - well, not all the rest of it. Sherwin - the stuff Sherwin owned, he didn't give it to us right away. Three baggage cars, the North Western cupola caboose, and the 218 box motor.
Two of the "L" cars had Stearns & Ward [couplers] and two of them had Van Dorns, so those were all right to adapt to. We'd have a Van Dorn on each end of the Stearns & Ward. Yeah, people that rode the trains, you know, some people that didn't work could be train guards. A can of journal oil, and hotbox sticks, and air hoses. You'd see that s--- going by, you know - a steam engine and the "Ely", "L" cars and all this goofy stuff, no cabooses on the back. Well the first thing out here was theNorth Shore
caboose we don't have. We knocked everything out of it, out of the inside, and
that was the bunkhouse.
Yeah, it was [the 1002]. We also had to put reporting marks on all the cars. So 1002 became UTC 12 - Union Traction Company. The North Western caboose was 10494, so I did a neat paint job - but if you add that up it's 18. So if you put "18" down you didn't have to put five numbers on each side! They didn't care what numbers they were. And I had an argument with the North Western inspector - he wasn't going to admit theNorth Shore
cars because they had Mickey Mouse trucks on them. [He said] "Those are
arch bar trucks and you can't." I say "Show me some good
trucks." He points to the wooden baggage car. "These are the kind of
trucks you're supposed to have." They were wood trucks with steel plates
on them! I got around that guy somehow. Then when I sent the cranes - the Edison cranes - to the junkyard, the guy wanted me to
pull the pinions on the cranes. I said "You guys brought them here!"
[He said] "Well I don't care." I say "Well, f--- them," you
know. Everybody else was worried about their job, and I quit mine. So I'll just
bill the f---ing things out. They went to the junkyard, and nobody came back to
see if we pulled the pinions on them. That was not a place [CHF] where you
wanted to work. It was all cinders and these horrible little sand burs - the
only way you could get them off was with a comb. You'd try to pick them off
with your fingers, then you couldn't get them out of your fingers. All the
cinders… The amazing thing was that we had a trolley bus there, the 193, the
one that's not taken apart. That was kind of tucked in the corner of the fence.
The fence was kind of odd shaped - the North Shore
went outside the fence switching the Navy yard before it came in the Foundry.
The fence was kind of a staggered chain-link fence with barbed wire on the top.
So where do you take a leak? Well you go all the way into the Foundry, or you
can just go and piss on this bus sitting next to the fence. I pissed on the
bus; everybody pissed on the bus, except Glenn Anderson. When it was time to
move, we had all the railroad cars out, and we had a little brick building
there - I think we called it the pump house, or something. [There was a] little
300-volt DC generator in there. We get a bunch of scaffold planks, you know,
just wide boards, put the ground on the rail to one pole, this stinger, and
drove the bus out to the parking lot! Over all the tracks and everything - you
know, it was pokey because it was only 300 volts, but it drove away. After we
pissed on that thing for all those years. Well, it probably wasn't too many
years then.
[Outside the fence,] that was boot camp there; the sailors would challenge us, you know - "What are you doing out here?" [We'd respond:] "What are you doing on our railroad?" "Well, I don't know, they told me to watch the fence." I said, "Well watch it! And don't get run over!" We even had the air conditioner working on the 277. We threw a stinger over the fence - just kept throwing it until the bare wire went over the trolley wire. I think we had a couple of track bolts tied onto the end of the wire. I've got a picture of [Dave] Shore standing in the doorway of 1797. We ran the 431 up there.
[Regarding a plan to run CA&E 431 on the North Shore:] Odinius even made an adapter coupler. Frank Beshak, the guy who still comes out, said "That's better than any car we got out here on our railroad." Mason says "You ain't running any of your s--- on our railroad." And he was right - what if it broke down? It's got goofy couplers on it; you don't know anything about it. You know, if you were a minute late when you got in on a run, you had to have a good reason why you were late. [They were] really sticklers about that. They weren't gonna take the chance. If you had a derailment or something… There were plans of running the 65 too. They had a TM fan trip that was 1121 and another car; no, just 1121. [It was a] single-end car and the ventilators on the clerestory are kind of [slanted] things towards the back end of the car. So when they wyed it at South Upton, they're going the other way and all the s--- comes blowing in on everybody! This was a one-way ventilator, you know, so instead of exhausting the stale air it's sucking it all in! Everybody's covered with stuff.
These are excerpts from a tape recorded interview I did with Bob Bruneau on December 3, 2003. I've edited out my questions and some content not relevant to the interview.
[I joined IRM in] 1956 because we got the IT cars. I came up with the money for the 101. I said I'd [also] donate a hundred dollars. Then they tried to cheat me out of another hundred dollars. They said "You said two hundred dollars!" …Our car [the 277] fell apart on the P&PU [Peoria & Pekin Union]. It was running “rear end of train only;” they pulled the front coupler out. [We asked:] "How'd you do that?" [They said:] "Well, it's not very strong, they only had 67 cars behind it!" It has a wood frame. So at
Well I worked on 101 a lot. Borrowed two tarps off of small trailers. In my stupidity. Trailers used to be round on the end. A lot of the trailers in those days were open-top; they just had car lines. And there's pictures - I don't have them - of 101 [that] says "Weber Cartage" on both ends. [Laughs] I think I worked on 415 because it didn't have any mothers. Ray Neuhaus was the President, I think. We sandblasted the 277 and painted it. Between the inner and outer windows was full of sand and finally I talked him into letting me work on that - [getting] the sand out. It was all wet sand, it stayed wet on the window sills. They had one of these big Coke tanks, you know, when you put your money in there and then they release a gate to slide your bottle around and pull it out. And the water was always green and slimy in there. And they had a drain cock on the thing; you had to fill it up with buckets, and it was a real loose one, trying to pick the kind of pop you wanted out of there. Somebody would bump the drain cock with their leg, and you'd walk by the car and it's leaking water out of the floor. So when I really - when we were moving [to Union], I got a couple of my buddies, and I can't remember who they were, and pitched it out the baggage door onto the ground. Help pay for the move. In the front of 277 on days like this when it was snowing, snow would blow in under the inside wall around the front. So I had a guy, Mattie Dalvo, from the North Shore, and all we had was a little table saw. How are you going to cut this part, with a quarter-round on the front? "Oh, that's easy," he says. He just takes the thing [makes sweeping motion with hands] RRRRROOOWW, tipped it right on 45 degrees, RRRRROOOWW - and there it was! A big block of wood with a radius on it, angled. I mean, it's crude as hell, I caulked the hell out of it.
…Odinius - he was a practical joker. And Bob Selle was working on the Singer engine that's down at Noblesville, and so Odinius gets me over by the Three-Spot, which was a sweeper body, double-truck sweeper body with a big door in the middle. That was the company shop. There wasn't much room in there. So he [Odinius] says "When I nod my head, unplug the cord. When I nod it again, plug it back in." [I ask:] "What's going on?" [Odinius says:] "Just do it and don't let anybody see you." So Selle's about 75 feet away with a couple of extension cords drilling holes. Howard nods his head so I unplug the thing. Bob looks around, checks the cords, yeah, they're all plugged in; [he] didn't come in the Three-Spot. Howard nods his head; [Selle] goes back, tries the electric drill, it runs. He starts drilling the hole again and he [Howard] nods his head again and I unplug it. And he's [Selle's] looking around - "What the f---'s going on?" Howard's got the extension cord like a garden hose, you know, folded in half, and the guy thinks he's - "Cut that out, Howard!" "What, what?" "You're cutting off my electricity!" He nods his head: "I am?" He lets go of the cord and I plug the thing in and it runs and then he nods and we do it again! I had to unplug it and the guy was going nuts! The other one was Jim Fox, he'd always like to play tricks on him. Especially in the restaurant, there was a strip there with all sailors and we'd go in there for lunch. Odinius would always get a dinner; it was a typical Greek restaurant. They always had peas, and Howard would always try and sit in the booth next to one of the Foxes. He'd take his spoon and he'd be shooting peas all the time! So Fox decided, "Well, I'll sit next to him and he can't do that to me any more." So Howard would be talking, stirring his coffee - and he had real hot coffee - and he's just talking, put his spoon on Jim's arm - "YEOW!" They had these hand-towel machines in there, you know, pull the towel down and dry your hands. One day some guys come walking in, towel machines under their arms, and we heard "crash, boom, bang!" And they walk out with no towel machines. The owner's all "bliblibliblibli" - Greek. They smashed the two towel machines off the wall and put their towel machines in, you know, the mob was still into all this. They'd just come in and blast the other towel guys' machines to smithereens off the wall, big holes in the plaster, and put their machines on. Now you had to buy from them! Next step was getting your legs broken or something.
[Regarding the move to Union:] Yeah, I didn't ride the trains but I, being out of work, and because of the move, I was there six days a week and I'd go back from Union Sunday night with whoever's going back to Chicago and then I'd recover for a day and Tuesday morning I'd hop the North Western back to Downey's and walk to the Museum. I built three ramps for the different cars; eight streetcars. Tore up track, sanded journals. We had an air line from the [CHF] factory that came out, inch and a quarter pipe, and the three wood baggage cars we had he [Frank Sherwin] gave us; some of that was just the right length, you know - taking the air line apart on the ground and screwing it into the car! Stopped the leaks. Junked a lot of stuff - roaring fires there [North Chicago] all the time. We got two electric locomotives from [Commonwealth] Edison, and two cranes, and two gons full of parts. To pay for the move, I had to scrap stuff. I sent brand new traction motors to scrap that were still in boxes. That hurt. We had a little wooden
I don't remember if there was four or five trains [going to Union]. But you had to do all the figuring out, you know. Go from MCB coupler to an MCB adapter to plug into a Van Dorn car and then a Van Dorn to a Tomlinson on the 431, and back to a Van Dorn and back to an MCB. See, there's some "L" cars in there plus the 309. [The 321 got a drawbar pulled out] right here in Union, by our interchange. A hose burst when they made a brake application - the back half of the train stopped and the front half kept going, for a little bit. The diesel didn't stop as fast. I forget what we did, how we got that off the railroad. Well, what happened, to move out here we bought a bunch of ties from the
We had to be out of [North Chicago] by the first of July. So the streetcars weren't out, but all the rest of it was - well, not all the rest of it. Sherwin - the stuff Sherwin owned, he didn't give it to us right away. Three baggage cars, the North Western cupola caboose, and the 218 box motor.
Two of the "L" cars had Stearns & Ward [couplers] and two of them had Van Dorns, so those were all right to adapt to. We'd have a Van Dorn on each end of the Stearns & Ward. Yeah, people that rode the trains, you know, some people that didn't work could be train guards. A can of journal oil, and hotbox sticks, and air hoses. You'd see that s--- going by, you know - a steam engine and the "Ely", "L" cars and all this goofy stuff, no cabooses on the back. Well the first thing out here was the
Yeah, it was [the 1002]. We also had to put reporting marks on all the cars. So 1002 became UTC 12 - Union Traction Company. The North Western caboose was 10494, so I did a neat paint job - but if you add that up it's 18. So if you put "18" down you didn't have to put five numbers on each side! They didn't care what numbers they were. And I had an argument with the North Western inspector - he wasn't going to admit the
[Outside the fence,] that was boot camp there; the sailors would challenge us, you know - "What are you doing out here?" [We'd respond:] "What are you doing on our railroad?" "Well, I don't know, they told me to watch the fence." I said, "Well watch it! And don't get run over!" We even had the air conditioner working on the 277. We threw a stinger over the fence - just kept throwing it until the bare wire went over the trolley wire. I think we had a couple of track bolts tied onto the end of the wire. I've got a picture of [Dave] Shore standing in the doorway of 1797. We ran the 431 up there.
[Regarding a plan to run CA&E 431 on the North Shore:] Odinius even made an adapter coupler. Frank Beshak, the guy who still comes out, said "That's better than any car we got out here on our railroad." Mason says "You ain't running any of your s--- on our railroad." And he was right - what if it broke down? It's got goofy couplers on it; you don't know anything about it. You know, if you were a minute late when you got in on a run, you had to have a good reason why you were late. [They were] really sticklers about that. They weren't gonna take the chance. If you had a derailment or something… There were plans of running the 65 too. They had a TM fan trip that was 1121 and another car; no, just 1121. [It was a] single-end car and the ventilators on the clerestory are kind of [slanted] things towards the back end of the car. So when they wyed it at South Upton, they're going the other way and all the s--- comes blowing in on everybody! This was a one-way ventilator, you know, so instead of exhausting the stale air it's sucking it all in! Everybody's covered with stuff.
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Wednesday Report
Today was another typical Wednesday, with lots of various projects being attacked. And as usual, I have an unplanned, haphazard, and totally random presentation of what was happening. Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back.
First of all, somebody asked to see the 309's Kevin sign:
Lorne continues fabricating new parts for the Cleveland PCC, mostly the ventilation system. It looks as good as new, if not better.
Out behind the shop, the North Shore trucks we got from Michigan as a parts source are being disassembled as seen here, prior to being placed in the material yard.
Norm and Jeff continue working on the Michigan Electric car. Jeff is happy to point out where the new steel parts are going.
These new angle bars will support the floor:
The Steam Dept. guys have helped out with some difficult riveting, which you can't actually see in this picture. But the inter-departmental cooperation is greatly appreciated.
And at the front, the last couple of bad body posts are ready for replacement.
As always, Tim is making progress on producing a complete set of new doors and windows for the 1754. Here he is cutting out tenons on the little band saw.
Behind the bench with the parts currently being assembled, you can see the ones already made in the rack, in the process of being stained or painted.
And the metal parts for the doors are being primed.
As usual, I spent most of the day painting the #2 vestibule in the 319.
The pull switch for the buzzer had bad paint, so it was easiest to removed it and take it to the shop for wire wheeling.
Once the paint is cleaned off, we can easily read the lettering:
The mechanism itself is in good shape. Each buzzer circuit takes about 0.1 amp, so for an eight-car train the switch would need to handle a little less than 1 amp at 600V. We don't have eight cars, of course, so it's a maximum of 0.4 amp.
It would have been nice to take the big hand brake lever to the shop also, but I couldn't get the set screw out. So it was cleaned in place with a combination of a putty knife and wire wheel.
And then painted with white primer.
And then, while the finish red in the 319 was drying, I put a first coat of primer on the floor of the #2 vestibule in the 36. The #1 vestibule is completely done, and only the floor and a few details at the #2 end need to be completed.
Unhappily, I won't be going to the Soiree this year, as we had made other plans. But if anyone wants to volunteer as a reporter on IRM's famous social nightlife, the envy of the railway museum world, just send me a line and we'll be glad to publish your reportage. Thanks!