There was a pretty good turnout of volunteers on this last day of 2011. [Note to self - remember to type 2012 from now on]. I guess the hardy volunteers are not the type of late night revelers planning to celebrate the turning of the calendar until the wee hours of the morning - or maybe they are?
Buzz Morisette is quietly working in the background, under the radar, making new sash for caboose ATSF 1400. He has fabricated a whole stack of new parts and here is cleaning out the mortises in one of the stiles.
Time to mix the glue with the frame on the workbench dry fit and assembled. It is always a good idea to study the directions on the can.
Later in the day we see that Buzz has completed three new windows and they are glued up, in the press for 24 hours.
When we make a new window sash the job does not end there. After sanding and painting, we find we have also made a number of small beading strips to be used for holding in the glass. Victor Humphreys is cutting and mitering each one to fit.
It is finally time to add the panes of glass. Victor is installing eight of them in the new windows for Norfolk and Western 2050.
There was lots of other activity, and here Eric Lorenz is giving us a 'clinic' on restoring the window tracks for Cleveland Transit 4223. There are many pieces needed to install just one window (five if I remember) and all of them need to be restored. Clean off corrosion, straighten and repair, replace lost or missing parts. There are many windows for this car, so any hardy volunteers that want to learn a new skill - come on out on a Wednesday or Saturday. The shop is heated and work continues through the winter months.
Time Peters continued on the new windows for Chicago Rapid Transit 1797. The windows are mostly glazed, fit and painted; so now, shiny brass hardware gets installed on each sash.
As I said many other projects saw work being done, but here is a bit of trivia. At least two of our vintage woodworking machines were manufactured by GREENLEE in nearby Rockford, IL. It can be a challenge to date when any of these were built but other research has yielded the following formula.
(First three digits of the serial number) minus 68, divided by 12 and added to 1900 equals the date built.
It seems very convoluted but has worked - dating our mortiser for 1925 and our glue press (seen above in this report) for 1924.
Comments
Mon, 09-08-2025 08:22
Good job on the Burlington Nortern 9976. OK.
Tue, 08-12-2025 12:56
No new news that I have heard of thus far.
Tue, 08-12-2025 12:53
I'll also be doing another update on it soon. Keep en eye out for that.
Tue, 08-12-2025 12:47
A little work was done to it for Diesel Days this year. You'll see photos floating around for the temporary short term job that was done to make it [...]
Wed, 08-06-2025 13:01
Is steam car CN 15444 going to be coming to museum several times it was to be moved to muesum
Sat, 07-19-2025 18:56
Yeah, sadly it's still there as of 7/19/2025
Thu, 06-12-2025 19:14
Its been 14 years guys, where is the unit? Like really? Did you guys misplace it? Or are repairs taking that long? At this point be might we will have [...]
Wed, 04-09-2025 17:40
Jamie Thanks for the update. She's gonna shine like every thing else you guys do! Smeds
Thu, 03-06-2025 16:28
Yes, there is a wye. Those two have been MU'ed on diesel days a year or two ago.
Wed, 03-05-2025 14:04
7009 number boards look good. Is there a way to turn a locomotive around at IRM? In case you ever had a mind to connect 7009 and 6847?
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...