Welcome to Accurate Calibration & Repair Service Inc.!
Since 1999, Accurate Calibration & Repair Service Inc. has delivered high quality calibration and repair services to the automotive, military and aerospace industry. Our company has been successful because of our extensive knowledge of equipment, standards of assurance, extreme attention to detail and untouchable customer service. Accurate Calibration & Repair Service Inc. technicians have over 40 years of combined experience within the industry and use the highest quality of equipment and technology to ensure a safe and accurate calibration each and every time.
Contact Accurate Calibration & Repair Service Inc. for 2750, Aerospace Calibration, Calibration, Furnace Repair, Industrial Furnace, Industrial Furnace Repair, Industrial Oven Repair, Instrument Calibration, Temperature Calibration, and Temperature Uniformity Survey. Proudly supporting the areas of Bridgeview, Carol Stream, Chicago, Cicero, Elk Grove Village, Franklin Park, Gary, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Rockford, and surrounding areas.
CONTACT US TODAY TO GET A QUOTE
Contact Accurate Calibration & Repair Service Inc. for 2750 in Carol Stream, Aerospace Calibration in Carol Stream, Calibration in Carol Stream, Furnace Repair in Carol Stream, Industrial Furnace in Carol Stream, Industrial Furnace Repair in Carol Stream, Industrial Oven Repair in Carol Stream, Instrument Calibration in Carol Stream, Temperature Calibration in Carol Stream, Temperature Uniformity Survey in Carol Stream, and in surrounding areas.
Below is some general information about Carol Stream:
Carol Stream is a village in DuPage County, Illinois, United States. Incorporated on January 5, 1959, and named after the developer’s daughter, Carol Stream had a population of 40,438 as of the 2000 U.S. census. In 2011 CNN’s Money Magazine ranked Carol Stream #49 on its list of 100 best places to live in the United States. In 1853, St. Stephen Catholic Church was built in Gretna. The church was closed in 1867. When St. Michael Church was opened in Wheaton in 1872, the St. Stephen parishioners were transferred to that parish. The church building was dismantled sometime in the late 19th century. St. Stephen Cemetery was located adjacent to the church building. It was last used for burial in 1910. The St. Stephen Cemetery was rededicated 100 years later on September 12, 2010. In 1952, a farm from the area was featured on NBC; it was the site for the first outdoor telecast by the network in 1954. A common misconception is that the municipality of Carol Stream was named for a local minor waterway. In fact, Carol Stream is one of the few communities in America which took its name from the first and last names of a living person: Carol Stream, the daughter of its founder Jay Stream. Jay W. Stream, a military veteran who had previously sold insurance and ready-mix concrete, was in the mid-1950s heading Durable Construction Company. He became frustrated with red tape while negotiating a planned 350-400 home subdivision in nearby Naperville, Illinois. A Naperville clerk reportedly advised Stream to build your own town, and in 1957, Stream began buying unincorporated farmland outside Wheaton. On Monday August 26, 1957, Carol and three friends were returning from Racine, Wisconsin in a 1949 Studebaker. While attempting to cross U.S. Route 45 in central Kenosha County, the car was struck in the right rear corner, killing 15-year-old Richard Christie of Chicago, the passenger seated there. Carol was ejected through the windshield and into a utility pole. Neurosurgeons at Kenosha Memorial Hospital said the comatose girl might never awaken or, if she did, would likely be severely handicapped. On advice of the doctors that her recovery might improve with good news, Jay decided to name the new community in her honor. After four months in a coma, Carol regained consciousness. Learning the new village bore her full name, Carol said she thought it odd and silly at first. Carol Stream was nearly named Jacqueline Stream, but her parents changed her name to Carol when her due date fell near Christmas. She never lived in her namesake community but moved from Wheaton, Illinois to Arizona in 1957 following the end of her parents’ marriage. She still participates in municipal celebrations and rides in parades during anniversary celebrations of the municipality’s 1959 incorporation, and is frequently asked for autographs when she is in town. Jay Stream is also commemorated in the town – his name is on the middle school. He died on January 22, 2006.
Most students in Carol Stream attend school in the Consolidated School District 93, a KÐ8 district. The District 93 schools in Carol Stream are: Carol Stream School, Cloverdale School, Elsie Johnson School, Heritage Lakes, Western Trails, Roy DeShane, Stratford Middle School and Jay Stream Middle School. District 93 is only K-8; thus, students must attend a different district when they reach the high school level. They are served by Glenbard Township High School District 87 (the third-largest school district in Illinois), which includes Glenbard North, located in Carol Stream. Part of the village is served by a unit school district, the Elgin Area School District U46. It serves an area of some 90 square miles in Cook, DuPage and Kane Counties. Almost 40,000 children of school age are in its area. District U-46 is the second-largest in Illinois. Spring Trail Elementary in Carol Stream serves in-district students for grades K-6. These students then attend Eastview Middle School for grades 7Ð8. High school students who live within the U-46 boundaries attend Bartlett High School. The western section of the village is served by Benjamin School District 25, a small, two-school district. Evergreen Elementary School is located in Carol Stream while Benjamin Middle School is nearby in unincorporated West Chicago. Founded in the 1840s, Benjamin 25 is one of the oldest school districts in DuPage County. High school students from Benjamin attend West Chicago Community High School, District 94.
Carol Stream has six major roads running through the village. The most important of these is North Avenue, which runs relatively close to the center of Carol Stream and serves the majority of its industrial areas. North Avenue is an East-West road which extends a further 30 miles East into Chicago as well as further west across the state. Army Trail Road and Geneva Road are the other major east-west roads. Gary Avenue is a major north-south road to the commercial center of Bloomingdale and the Stratford Square Mall. County Farm Road also serves as a major commercial route for residents. Schmale Road serves a small commercial area on the southeastern side of Carol Stream. Kuhn Road also runs north-south, but is not that major. Lies Road is a minor east-west road that bisects the village starting from Fair Oaks Drive on the west to Schmale on the east. The portion from Country Farm Road thru Kuhn Road to near Gary Avenue is the route for the annual Fourth of July parade. A feeder line from the nearby Illinois Central Railroad serves the main industrial complex for Carol Stream. The old Gretna Railway Station was preserved and moved to the Carol Stream Park District, where it serves as a museum and a home for the Carol Stream Historical Society.
Source: Carol Stream on Wikipedia