Here is a very late update on the progress on GB&W 2407 from February 12th, I had drafted it before I went on vacation for a couple of weeks and forgot to publish it. We had a pretty large group out Saturday afternoon, including Frank DeVries, Marcus Ruef, Warren Lloyd, Kyle Merkel, Kevin Hennessy, Greg Ceurvorst, Dave Fullarton, Jeron Glander, Jim West, Dan Currens, Rich Schauer, and myself. The main tasks were to get the rest of the water system tight. The previous weekend and during the week we had made a number of repairs, but did not have a chance to water it again. The electrical system, governor, and air compressor were also worked on.
Dan Currens started by digging into the electrical system, verifying everything was connected and functioning properly in the cabinet, and with the governor and such. Kyle and Jim worked on refilling the governor and pump with oil. We will have to flush the system again at a later date. There was some minor raccoon damage, but the majority of the electrical system was in pretty good shape.
Meanwhile Dave and Kevin were working on checking all the injection pumps, seeing which ones were free and which were sticking. They found a bunch that were very tight and began working on lubricating and freeing them up. Warren, Kyle and Rich joined in as well.
Frank and Marcus made a gasket to replace the leaking one on a cover on the air compressor, and then changed the oil in the compressor. We started watering again to verify the latest repairs and was very surprised at how well it was holding water. We did mark a few more water elbows that we had not marked the last time, along with some additional pipe couplings. Frank noticed a crack on a low pressure cylinder liner that was leaking water. There were a number of other leaks in this area the last time, so we didn't notice it. We are looking into some ways to fix this without changing the liner as it looks like the only damage is this area on the outside of the water jacket.
Greg joined Marcus and Frank, and they made some more gaskets to replace the leaking ones along with some hoses on a few of the water elbows on the engineers side after draining the water. They made enough for all the ones that were leaking on both sides. Warren replaced two of them on one side of the loco while Marcus and Frank replaced a few on the engineers side. While draining, we noticed that the compressor and water cooled intercooler on the compressor did not have a drain as the pipe that should have gone to the main drain valve was removed and plugged. This was done sometime when it was on the railroad, and is probably why there were water problems on the compressor. We'll have to thoroughly check out the intercooler as well.
It was a very productive day and I'd like to thank everyone that helped out to move this project much further along. Be sure to visit the Photo Gallery of the current work going on. Also, donations to the RSD15 are still needed and appreciated.
Saturday's plan involved a two pronged attack. One group was to finish walking the mainline, the second team was to load the mainline ties onto a flatcar, so they can be peddled out for install in the coming weeks.
Again, I picked up Marcus at Aurora Transportation Center, and we drove up to Marengo Cafe for breakfast. After Breakfast we met a new volunteer to our group, Patrick Shea. Adam joined us at the caboose on 110 track and the plans were set in motion.
Marcus and I walked track. We started with the stretch from East switch to Karstens, so the diesel department could use the east switch as head room for fueling diesels. We then continued out to signal 201 with no significant defects found. The walk continued from East switch to West before we broke for lunch. After lunch we finished off the West end finding one broken bar. The total repairs for this spring, two pull aparts east of 4 mile siding, which is still out of service, One broken bar on the main between 201 and 251. One broken bar at West switch. We intend to have the two broken bars fixed before the start of the season. The pull aparts depend on getting some warm sunny weather to get the rails to expand enough to get new bolts in the rail.
Adam and Patrick grabbed the fork lift and started loading bundles of ties onto the TTX flat car that the Camp Grant arrived on. All the other IRM flats are in use, so we pressed this one into service since it was just taking up space in the siding. The diesel department was kind enough to retrieve it and bring it to along barn 9 for us. In short order Adam and Patrick had the flat loaded up and ready for Sunday's distribution party.
A break for a brief meeting, and we were back at it putting the train together. Tom joined us for this phase of the job. Tom finished off getting the four part hook put back on the crane. The hook was taken off last year to rig up the clam shell for loading stone. Tom, Marcus, and I, then got the 529 caboose moved over and the loaded flat car onto track 112, while Adam and Patrick loaded a couple more bundles of ties onto tie flats with the tie crane. The tie crane was tied down in yard 10 for the night.
Tomorrow's projects, go out and peddle ties where we marked ties for replacement.
A few photos have been posted here:
http://www.irm.org/gallery/album271Frank D.
Sunday, March 13. 2011
Greg Ceurvorst, John Faulhaber, and Fred Zimmerman are discussing the days work - what else - more windows!
Greg was doing some finish sanding on the new Villa Falls windows. Earlier, he, Fred and Victor Humphreys moved some structural steel from the Barn 4 floor to inside the B&O boxcar.
Fred and Victor were repairing another step well for the ATSF caboose. Fred is all suited up and the sparks are flying!
Randy Hicks has just completed some tricky notches for a new poplar window sill for the IT cars undergoing repairs in Barn 4.
Earlier, Randy completed post repairs on the IT 277. There was a lot of woodwork and tricky parts to replace rotted members, under that wide window post steel plate.
Or rather - sign box of the times. Mike Stauber and Frank Sirinek have removed the front signbox from the Kansas City PCC and they had it in the shop. Disassembly, cleanup and repairs ensued. Done with that stage, it is ready for primer and repainting.
Comments
Fri, 03-29-2024 21:26
We're slackers and spend more time working on the equipment in the shop than keeping all you readers updated. We'll work on it, but I'm sure updates [...]
Thu, 03-14-2024 08:02
What happened to the Department Blog? It's been over 2 years and I still regularly check for updates, but nothing comes...
Mon, 12-27-2021 16:28
Happy New Year to all the Departments at the Illinois railway Museum! Thanks for all the good work you do in railroad preservation. Ted Miles, [...]
Wed, 10-13-2021 13:33
Was the CB&Q 1309 every transported to IRM?I’ve been reading old issues of Rail&Wire and the car was mentioned several times.
Mon, 06-07-2021 22:40
I was wondering if in the model layout display what scale would you guys be using and would you be displaying model train history as well? Just [...]
Wed, 06-02-2021 17:27
Nice to see 428's cab back on. Looking forward to when it is operable!
Tue, 06-01-2021 16:47
I hope the work will continue on the UP #428. Now that they are the museum's connection to the national railroad network; she would be very [...]
Sat, 04-17-2021 23:07
What is the status of 126, the Milwaukee Buffet car that is in S. Dakota? Any guess on when or if it will get to IRM?
Wed, 04-14-2021 21:09
Perhaps it is time to scrap the remains of the c, B & Q 7128 to make room for the Villa Real. Ted miles, IRM member
Wed, 04-14-2021 15:26
Hi IRM my name is Jason and I was wonder If you guys would be willing to save a CN Dash8-40cm they are currently being retired by CN and being [...]
Fri, 04-09-2021 19:56
Bear in mind that the Nebraska Zephyr is an articulated train set, so cars cannot be inserted at will. Although cars and/or a second engine could be [...]
Wed, 03-31-2021 11:37
I believe Silver Pony is currently on the back burner, and has been put into storage in one of the barns. The car needs a lot of work done to it's [...]