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Plant tour of DC Water's facilities during ISA's WWAC 2018 Symposium

Mrs. J. William Clark House, 49 East 68th Street, Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States.

 

This house adjoins and may be considered a part of that outstanding group of neo-Federal townhouses which extends along the west side of Park Avenue, between East 68th and 69th Streets. The houses on Park Avenue are sometimes referred to as the "Pyne-Davison Blockfront" due to their uniform architectural quality.

 

It was designed by the architectural firm of Trowbridge & Livingston and was built in 1913-14. The height of its first story base, the belt course between the third and fourth floors and the roof cornice are set at approximately the same level as those of the corner house, No. 680 Park Avenue.

 

Only two bays wide, No. 49 East 68th Street Is given interest and importance by a twin-arched loggia at street level. This is made possible by having the wall of the first floor set back about six feet from the building line. The arch on the right leads to the arched entrance doorway, while that on the left leads directly to the basement stairs protected by a low iron railing and gate. An arched window is set above the basement entrance door.

 

The second-story windows were originally muntined casements extending to the floor. These and all the other windows facing the street were replaced with single fixed sheets of plate glass, when the entire structure was air-conditioned, however, the two second-story windows have retained their thin vertical limestone reveals at the windows. The second floor lintels consist of delicate projecting cornices supported on console brackets.

 

The third story windows have paneled stone lintels, while a limestone horizontal belt course separates the third and fourth floors and serves as a sill for the fourth floor windows. A simple limestone roof cornice crowns the brickwork of the facade, which is laid up in English bond. The copper covered gambrel roof above is pierced by two Pedimented dormer windows.

 

This house was built as a residence for J. William Clark, a grandson of the Patrick Clark who invented the form of cotton sewing thread, that was first produced in Paisley, Scotland in 1812. Clark's sewing thread was introduced to America in 1818, but, during the Civil War, when importing became difficult, William Clark and his brother opened a thread mill in Newark, New Jersey, where a 6-cord thread, trademarked "O.N.T." (Our New Thread), was perfected and became famous. Today this building is known as "Automation House".

 

- From the 1970 NYCLPC Landmark Designation Report

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The future is already here with new age technology of home automation. It has more benefits than you can imagine. To know more view this Infographic.

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ISA Staff getting ready to register attendees at ISA Automation Week 2010: Technology and Solutions Event.

Is the use of software with artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning capabilities to handle high-volume, repeatable tasks that previously required humans to perform.

Junto a Fagor Edewrlan y Arizmendi Ikastola (Almen)

My new (old) addition!

 

The Nikon F3 is Nikon's third professional single lens reflex camera body, preceded by the F and F2. Introduced in 1980, it had manual and semi-automatic exposure control whereby the camera would select the correct shutter speed (aperture priority automation). The Nikon F3 series cameras had the most model variations of any Nikon F camera. It was also the first of numerous Nikon F-series cameras to be styled by Italian designer Giorgetto Giugiaro, and to include a red stripe on the handgrip -- a feature that would later become (with variants of stripes and various other shapes) a signature feature of many Nikon cameras.

 

"Information from Wikipedia"

Step into the world of Automation with india's one of the great Automation Institutions .https://ipcsautomation.com/this link will make visit you to the official website.

Home Automation – Run Your Home Wirelessly

Home Automation – What’s Next?

While it was something once seen in science fiction movies and futuristic films, home automation (also known as SMART homes) are becoming an increasing trend as technology makes a greater push into...

 

buildersontario.com/home-automation

Automation Alley Summer Networking Event at Grid4 Communications in Troy.

A collage of screenshots of multitrack automation channels in Reason 4.0. Click "all sizes" for detail, this image is huge.

Formerly Mrs. J. William Clark House, 49 East 68th Street, Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

  

This house adjoins and may be considered a part of that outstanding group of neo-Federal townhouses which extends along the west side of Park Avenue, between East 68th and 69th Streets. The houses on Park Avenue are sometimes referred to as the "Pyne-Davison Blockfront" due to their uniform architectural quality.

 

It was designed by the architectural firm of Trowbridge & Livingston and was built in 1913-14. The height of its first story base, the belt course between the third and fourth floors and the roof cornice are set at approximately the same level as those of the corner house, No. 680 Park Avenue.

 

Only two bays wide, No. 49 East 68th Street Is given interest and importance by a twin-arched loggia at street level. This is made possible by having the wall of the first floor set back about six feet from the building line. The arch on the right leads to the arched entrance doorway, while that on the left leads directly to the basement stairs protected by a low iron railing and gate. An arched window is set above the basement entrance door.

 

The second-story windows were originally muntined casements extending to the floor. These and all the other windows facing the street were replaced with single fixed sheets of plate glass, when the entire structure was air-conditioned, however, the two second-story windows have retained their thin vertical limestone reveals at the windows. The second floor lintels consist of delicate projecting cornices supported on console brackets.

 

The third story windows have paneled stone lintels, while a limestone horizontal belt course separates the third and fourth floors and serves as a sill for the fourth floor windows. A simple limestone roof cornice crowns the brickwork of the facade, which is laid up in English bond. The copper covered gambrel roof above is pierced by two Pedimented dormer windows.

 

This house was built as a residence for J. William Clark, a grandson of the Patrick Clark who invented the form of cotton sewing thread, that was first produced in Paisley, Scotland in 1812. Clark's sewing thread was introduced to America in 1818, but, during the Civil War, when importing became difficult, William Clark and his brother opened a thread mill in Newark, New Jersey, where a 6-cord thread, trademarked "O.N.T." (Our New Thread), was perfected and became famous. Today this building is known as "Automation House".

 

- From the 1970 NYCLPC Landmark Designation Report

Formerly Mrs. J. William Clark House, 49 East 68th Street, Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

  

This house adjoins and may be considered a part of that outstanding group of neo-Federal townhouses which extends along the west side of Park Avenue, between East 68th and 69th Streets. The houses on Park Avenue are sometimes referred to as the "Pyne-Davison Blockfront" due to their uniform architectural quality.

 

It was designed by the architectural firm of Trowbridge & Livingston and was built in 1913-14. The height of its first story base, the belt course between the third and fourth floors and the roof cornice are set at approximately the same level as those of the corner house, No. 680 Park Avenue.

 

Only two bays wide, No. 49 East 68th Street Is given interest and importance by a twin-arched loggia at street level. This is made possible by having the wall of the first floor set back about six feet from the building line. The arch on the right leads to the arched entrance doorway, while that on the left leads directly to the basement stairs protected by a low iron railing and gate. An arched window is set above the basement entrance door.

 

The second-story windows were originally muntined casements extending to the floor. These and all the other windows facing the street were replaced with single fixed sheets of plate glass, when the entire structure was air-conditioned, however, the two second-story windows have retained their thin vertical limestone reveals at the windows. The second floor lintels consist of delicate projecting cornices supported on console brackets.

 

The third story windows have paneled stone lintels, while a limestone horizontal belt course separates the third and fourth floors and serves as a sill for the fourth floor windows. A simple limestone roof cornice crowns the brickwork of the facade, which is laid up in English bond. The copper covered gambrel roof above is pierced by two Pedimented dormer windows.

 

This house was built as a residence for J. William Clark, a grandson of the Patrick Clark who invented the form of cotton sewing thread, that was first produced in Paisley, Scotland in 1812. Clark's sewing thread was introduced to America in 1818, but, during the Civil War, when importing became difficult, William Clark and his brother opened a thread mill in Newark, New Jersey, where a 6-cord thread, trademarked "O.N.T." (Our New Thread), was perfected and became famous. Today this building is known as "Automation House".

 

- From the 1970 NYCLPC Landmark Designation Report

The Mitsubishi D700 Variable Frequency Drive is the Low Cost direct replacement for the S500 & S500E Variable Frequency Drives and includes the following improvements:

 

* Improved speed range. 150% or more motor torque is now possible at 1 Hz using General Purpose Magnetic Flux Vector control, giving a smooth open loop speed range of 60:1.

* More interoperability. The D700 communications include Modbus RTU as well as Mitsubishi Electric’s own RS 485 programming protocol (supported as standard).

* Remote operation. Drive I/O can be remotely operated over any supported network, regardless of what the drive is doing.

* Easy mounting. In smaller panel spaces, the D700 can be “bookshelf’ mounted without a gap in between, and DIN Rail mounting is also possible.

* 100kA fault-withstand rating simplifies panel construction.

* Safety Stop Function. The D700 comes standard with a safety stop circuit allowing the removal of a previously required external contactor and is EN951-1 Category 3 and IEC60204-1 Stop Category 0 compliant.

* RoHS compliant. Approved for installation on Europe-bound machines.

* High accuracy. Analog inputs/outputs provide master/slave control.

* “Maintenance free.” Intelligent fan control, fewer moving parts, more robust bus capacitors and custom-made intelligent power modules are all designed to have a 10-year operating life so that users can install the D700 and forget it.

 

mitsubishi-inverters.mrostop.com/mitsubishi-d700-inverter...

 

Testing area in Arrasate production plant

Automated component testing for an aerospace application.

RSK automation system has world class automation services and as a team we want to enhance scale of our services every day with a motive to deliver what’s required.

Detail, automatic assembly machine

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