STEADY NICHE page 61 12 MONTH CERTIFICATE 5.75' rail cars to ship heavy materi- als hire private, non-railroad contractors to handle their rail needs. In the world of rail industry, Mr.Trunsky has turned being small to his advantage. Local contractors coming up a few rails or bolts short of complet- ing a project turn to Crown Steel to fill orders that are far below minimum requirements of larg- er rail supply competitors and rail mills. In effect, Mr. Trunsky has positioned Crown Steel as the full-line railroad hardware store for small to medium con- tractors. They only supply; they do not manufacture or install. "We go after the orders no- body else wants," says Mr. Trun- sky. "You can't call up a rail mill and say, 'I need 10 rails tomor- INTEREST RATE 5270 A.P.Y./* 60 MONTH CERTIFICATE 6.00% 6.13' INTEREST RATE promised a comfortable, steady living. Harold Trunsky's pre- dictions proved right for his son and grandson, Rodger Trunsky, 34. There are no advanced de- grees in rail steel. Kasle Steel trained Mr. Trunsky from the bottom up, sending him to West Virginia in 1947-48 to observe a major mill fabricating steel rail- road tracks and tie plates. Mr. Trunsky remained at Kasle for the next 30 years until the com- pany dropped its rail line in 1978. Realizing he wasn't going to receive an equity stake in an- other family's business, Mr. Trunsky took life savings of $60,000 and started Crown Steel Rail Co. at the age of 52. "I was very nervous because A.P.Y./* These are fixed rate certificates of deposit that are insured by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). A minimum opening deposit and balance of $500.00 is required to obtain the stated Annual Percentage Yield. 4111b ". FZIA557 .4..#1R 1.1 sm BANK EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY LENDER CALL (810)338-7700 or (810)352-7700 44,* .. **- 0r*****.. Deix.it• 4 4, * Federally Insured* A to Swo.000 - * * 1 * • `. * -V * Main Office 2600 Telegraph Rd. Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302 Leonard Trunsky has found a niche market with railroad rail. *1.44*** 'Annual percentage yield when compounded quarterly. Rate is accurate as of 6/20/97. Penalty for early withdrawal from certificate accounts may be assessed. assic CCOU Minimum $5,000 Minimum $500 *Unlimited Checking! (810) 380-6590 21211 Haggerty Road at 8 Mile. Next to [he Novi Hilton. AIL NI ICHICAN HERITAGE FDIC IENDFF Insured 75 Annual Percentage Yield is effective as of April 24.1097. Penalty for early \vithdrawal. Business or brokered accounts not eligible. row.' Mills have minimum or- ders of 40,000 pounds and most people don't need that much." Mr. Trunsky is a prominent member of the fading commu- nity of independent railroad middlemen called "jobbers." In the spirit of diamond merchants' legendary handshake deals, Crown Steel takes rush orders from long-standing customers. Price is not discussed. "Len supplies small amounts of parts. That's one of the rea- sons we like to do business with him," says David Maga, presi- dent of Armond Cassil Co. in Warren. "Leonard is probably the most respected person in the Detroit area as far as railroads are concerned. "When you're bidding on job and you have a price in mind and you have to count on some- one, you need someone you can trust from the past. He's never failed as far as delivering rail on time." Mr. Trunsky began his rail career in 1947 as an employee of Kasle Steel Co. after a three- year tour in the army. Mr. Trun- sky's father, Harold, a former Michigan representative for West Virginia Rail Co., advised his son to work in rail because the field was small and I always worked for a large com- pany all my life and I didn't know if I could handle all the as- pects of running a business, from financing to engineering and purchasing," says Mr. Trun- sky. "When you want something done at a big company, you just write it down on a piece of pa- per and give it to someone and it gets done. When you go into business on your own, you have to do everything yourself." The only real safety net for Mr. Trunsky was a patent for an inexpensive type of track he designed to smooth railroad in- tersections. He called it Flange- master. Frequent bumpy drives into work over railroad tracks prompted Mr. Trunsky to con- tract an engineer in 1960 to help him put his ideas on paper. Al- though Flangemaster isn't the smoothest crossing material, says Mr. Maga, it remains a world standard for an inexpen- sive alternative to costlier prod- ucts. Flangemaster and overhead factory crane track, the rail en- abling cranes to slide back and forth across a warehouse, are Crown Steel's staples. Because overhead cranes are typically in constant use, compared to train rail receiving 20-30 trains