Frank writes...
Sunday was the last day of the regular operating season for 2017. Fittingly, one of the service cars for the day was the last standard interurban car built in the country, CA&E 460, shown below. It was a chilly day but bright and sunny.
Anyway, for me it was an afternoon of work on Shaker Heights 18. During the week the hardware needed for the steel plate that I'd ordered arrived, so that meant the thing could finally be installed. Amazingly, all of the holes lined up perfectly, and new volunteer Jon helped me get the plate bolted into place, as shown below.
After that it was drilling holes along the top edge and putting in some wood screws. I felt like I spent half the afternoon hunting for the right wood screws but did get the top of the plate fixed in place as shown below. There is a cabinet that sits on top of this plate; it's been pushed back a few inches but is visible in the photos. That got put in place but we didn't have the right screws to attach it so that will have to wait until next time. The same goes for reattaching the two seats forward of the doors, which were detached prior to the car coming to IRM. Thrilling, I know.
Other than that, there were a few other people who were out in the barn working. Norm, Jeff, and our favorite Ohioan Walt Stafa were hard at work installing rivets on the Michigan car. For a while Jon was also helping them out. Below, Jon gets ready to transfer a hot rivet into place for driving; Walt runs the torch to heat the rivet white-hot; and Norm and Jeff (the latter partly inside the car, so to speak) stand ready to drive and buck the rivet respectively. I wasn't about to just wander through this scene to get a photo but note in the background, over Norm's shoulder, that the end of the 1754 has a nice coat of Chicago Elevated Railways green and orange on it. The car really looks sharp in this paint scheme with those tall end windows.
Other than that, Bob was working on some of the metalworking machines while later in the day Gregg stopped into the shop after a day rebuilding the cab interior on Minnesota Transfer 200. Dan also stopped in after helping the steam guys with the brakes on the Shay and the Diesel Department guys were over in Barn 2 finishing up the paint job on the "bankruptcy blue" Rock Island GP7.