Tuesday, August 7. 2012
News and Views - August 4-5, 2012 Posted by Robert Kutella
in General Blog Entries at
11:21
Comments (0) News and Views - August 4-5, 2012This will include a wide variety to give some hint of some of the activities this weekend COMING BACK TO LIFE! It sounds simple to make such a move but all the trolley fans got excited with the appearance of Shaker Heights Rapid Transit 63 inside Barn 4 over the pit. Eric Lorenz is helping LARGE with a systematic and careful checkout. Yes, it is really inside Barn 4 and it is looking good, if you do mind the last service paint scheme. This car was originally built for and operated for the Twin Cities in Minnesota. A trolley pole has been fitted and restored to the roof, as god always intended. The pole was up and progress made. The MG set was running, some of the entry doors working again, if only sluggishly, and the headlight worked! What else do we need? I am going to sneak this image in here, rather than a separate entry for only one pic. We managed to make eight new interior framing timbers for the CGW X 38 snow plow, fit them, drill them, and all prime painted ready to install. Victor Humphreys is in the shop taking shelter from the brutal heat Saturday early, before a line of storms blew through. George Clark was in the Barn prime painting a new letterboard for the Lake Shore Electric 810. We still identify this part as a letterboard although in this case, no actual lettering will be applied for this paint scheme. One of the things we are able to do is to do some work with industry partners. Trailer Train had some of their Engineering Department on site to do some testing on the deck of our 75 foot TTX piggyback car. The car presented a unique opportunity to help judge wear and life span of the white oak deck boards still being applied to some of their equipment. In this case the car presented a good 'control' for wood which had seen years of use, without really being used in transport, virtually remaining as installed. Frank Sirinek was escorting some visitors on a sort of 'private' access tour of the C&WT 141. Smiles all around. Sunday was our annual vintage car show and for the first time in recent memory, the weather was near perfect. Over 400 vehicles had pre-registered, and an additional 133 were 'walk-ins' bring the total to over 500. There were vintage restored cars on every grassy flat spot and it seemed there was a good turnout of visitors to enjoy the spectacle. Tuesday, August 7. 2012
Michigan Electric 28 Update - August ... Posted by Ray Schmid
in Michigan Electric 28 at
08:54
Comments (0) Michigan Electric 28 Update - August 5, 2012More Side Window Replacement and Roof Slat Installation On Sunday, Norm Krentel and Ray Schmid were successful in installing five restored windows into the right rear window openings. Two storm window sashes and two lower sashes were installed along with one interior upper sash. All the wood stops and trim pieces were also screwed in place to hold the windows. The pictures below show the finished upper sash. Side note: Only the interior upper sash contains pressed prism glass that is frosted. The exterior pressed prism glass is clear. The pattern on both windows is identical. The light coming through the newly cleaned prism glass is making these windows appear much more attractive now that the raised arch pattern can be seen. Jeff Brady is shown below nailing the second and final layer of slats over the first. Each basswood slat needs to be hand tapered and fitted so that it will lay flat on the rear curved roof. He is finished with the second layer where the slats will bend without breaking. The side slats on the left and right have such a severe bend that they will break in two or split if they are bent dry. These will require Jeff to treat them with steam until they become more pliable. Once bent and nailed, the steam treated slats will retain their shape after drying. With the 90 to 100 degree weather we are having this summer Jeff is waiting for the weather to cool before using steam in the car barn. I think this is a wise decision! Sunday, August 5. 2012
Steam Department Update 08-04-2012 Posted by Nigel Bennett
in Steam Department at
12:13
Comments (0) Steam Department Update 08-04-2012It was one of those days when casual observation could suggest that the steam department had done nothing !. However we made steady progress on some critical work although the visible effect does not look much. On 1630: · we have now agreed terms with the boiler welding specialist for the back tube sheet and super heater flue work. Hopefully that will be done shortly. It should only take 4 days once he is on site. · the pipe to replace the corroded runs along sides of the boiler has been located and ordered. This in itself gave some quite surprising results. The small diameter heavy gauge steel pipe used on a steam locomotive now has few uses and is made in small quantities. Price is therefore driven by batch sizes and availability rather than the weight so we have larger tube costing less than larger and seamless costing less than seamed in some cases. · Collin finished the inside of the front tube sheet, so internally we now only have the contract welding of the rear tube sheet to do. · Mike and Bob continued forming the test sheet for the firebox patch. The activity this week was focused on forming the shape to match the sloping front tube sheet while retaining an accurate match to the curve of the mud ring. · the major activity was the continuing battle with the smoke box bolts. These apparently insignificant 3/4 inch bolts occupied a number of us all day. Looking at the locomotive in service they are simply the bolts onto which the nuts, that you see in a circle around the edge of the smoke box front sheet, are threaded. Although they appear at first sight to be studs, they are actually "T" headed bolts, unthreaded in the length that passes thru the front ring, that are driven into the ring from the rear. The snag is that they cannot be a really tight fit on the front sheet so there is a hidden cavity behind the nut in which moisture and gases attack the bolt. In service the smoke box is under vacuum and any leakage causes loss of efficiency and rapid corrosion as air is sucked past heated metal. We want to ensure that, once we do this overhaul, we have reasonable confidence that 1630 will be good for the next 15 years so we are working on the basis that these bolts should be replaced where they are wasted to less than 5/8th inch. This means removing 11 bolts. It is clear that the bolts at the top and bottom, which are subject to greatest wear, have been replaced at some stage as most of the 11 are at the sides. The documented way of removing these bolts is to hammer them from the front, potentially having heated the ring to assist the process. The bolts on 1630 do not seem to have heard of this process !!. None have proved possible to hammer out anything like whole. They are so firmly in place that hammering expands the bolt in the hole and makes it impossible to remove. The technique evolved during the day is to grind off the head of the bolt (which we think may in some cases have been welded during repairs at some time), very carefully drill a hole centered on the bolt and enlarge it to allow an air hammer bit to be inserted. This allows the air hammer to be used with less expansion of the bolt. If this does not work you have to collapse the sides of the bolt into the hole, re drill and try again. We now have 5 out. They are very variable. The last and worst did not come out until we had done this multiple times and reduced the length for 2 1/4 inch to 3/4. The huge frustration is that, when they eventually come out, it is just a plain smooth plug with nothing to indicate why it would have been so difficult to move. Here you can see the bolts. The green paint marks indicate good. The red marks and gaps those that are to be or have been removed. Here we are working on the last one on the engineers side, which proved to be the worst so far. Late on we called in reinforcements and received full support from the IRM Board. Thank you Jim !!. Any way , 6 more on the fireman's side for next weekend, then we can think about putting in the new ones.
Elsewhere Phil removed the lugs from the back of one of the axle boxes for 428 so that it can be mounted on the Bullard turret lathe to machine the bearing face. The plan will be to fit brass bearing faces, similar to those fitted to 1630, rather than poured babbit faces previously used. I will not be at Union next Saturday as my son is getting married. I do hope to be there Sunday so hopefully I will be able to report on a lot that the team has been able to get done without me getting in the way!. Nigel |
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Comments
Tue, 06-02-2026 19:38
Always a treat when a new diesel comes to IRM! Only wish we'd get more diesel department news from week to week, I always wonder what's going on in [...]
Wed, 04-01-2026 09:01
Good job on the barn 15
Wed, 03-25-2026 18:21
Exciting to see a new barn going up! What's next, after the RAIL project is complete?
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.