Ted,
I was one of the group that installed brakes on flatcar 126 and Coach 8 back in the Spring. I arrived Thursday morning, as we were asked to install brakes on 126 first so that it could be used in ballast service on Friday. Jason, Jonathan (St. Mary), and Vern (Shaw) had cut timbers for the brake beams, cut and threaded some 5/8" rod for the connecting rods, forged brake beam bolts and beam hangers, and gathered together new castings for the brake shoe holders. So, we moved 126 into Bay 2 and lifted the one end of the car and rolled the truck out. This made the installation much easier. We hung the brake beams and installed the safety chains. When it came time to install the brake lever (there is only one used for freight car brakes), we found that the length used for Jackson & Sharp coach trucks are too short for the Portland freight truck. As I had had the shop guys at the Baltimore Streetcar Museum make me two new levers, and Josh Lepman delivered them - but to the length used on the J&S truck - so we had to make new, longer ones. We found some bar stock and cut 2 new levers - Coach 8 rides on freight car trucks and would need a lever as well). After drilling the holes, we installed the lever on the truck. The rod connecting the two brake beams together needed to be heated and bent slightly so that the brake beams pivoted square to the axle. The rod with chain for the brake wheel was attached to the top hole on the brake lever and then we rolled the truck back under the car. After lowering the truck back onto the kingpin, we adjusted the length of the rod so that there was enough chain on the brake staff for at least one full wrap of chain with the brakes released. While this is a short description, the actual work took most of Thursday to complete.
On Friday, we started the same process on Coach 8 - including using the overhead hoist in Bay 2 to lift the car end. Important note - do not try this at home! While we managed to lift the end of the car, we realized we were seriously over the rating for the hoists. So the car end was lowered onto cribbing for safety. For Coach 8, we had to make a lot of the parts, as there had been only enough of some items for one car. So, we cut and profiled brake beams and drilled them to accept the brake shoe holders. The brake lever I had made on Thursday wasn't long enough for the freight truck used under Coach 8. Even though the two trucks looked the same, we ended up scrounging another piece of bar stock and cutting a longer lever. I think we managed to get the truck portion complete on Friday so that the car could roll on its own on Saturday; however, we still had to install a brake wheel and staff assembly. The steel platforms installed by Edaville used some of the original hardware such as the posts and the top bar-stock plates. So, we had a top hold for the brake staff to pass through, but no lower hole to pass through the platform itself. Although there was a steel plate bent and formed to form an area for the brake chain under the platform, we had to connect that location with the upper brake staff position. We started drilling through the platform Friday evening and continued until well after dark - the drill bits weren't the sharpest and the drill wasn't the strongest for such large bits. In any case, by lunch on Saturday, Coach 8 was sunning itself out in the yard sporting brakes on the south truck. Marcel and the fellow that made new windows for Coach 8 spent the afternoon varnishing and installing windows into Coach 8.
Some of the folks involved with the brake work include: Jason Lamontagne, Jon McChristian, Vern Shaw, Gawdon Cook, Ira Schreiber, Don Sanger, Cindy Sanger Rhine, Zac Wyllie, Marcel Levesque, and Dave Crow. I apologize if I accidentally left out anyone.
Dave Crow