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The Trent & Mersey canal at Middleport, Staffordshire. This is about 4.5 miles from Kidsgrove where boaters doing the Cheshire Ring Canals route leave the Trent and Mersey canal and join the Macclesfield canal.
The M3 CRT (Carbon Racing Technology) was announced in June 2011 as a 2012 model. The car is powered by a 4.4-litre V8 based on the 4.0-litre engine found in the standard M3, which produces a maximum of 450 PS (331 kW; 444 hp). Despite luxury extras, the car still weighs 100 lb (45 kg) less than a regular M3 saloon. Compared to a saloon with the same luxury equipment, it weighs 155 lb (70 kg) less.
Photo: Thomas Ohlsson Photography
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Been experimenting rotating my light blades the past three nights, really enjoying this CRT and have plenty of ideas for it. These are some of my favourites from the past few nights. SOOC apart from a crop.
1968 Ginetta G11.
Registered in May 1970.
One of 4 G11s made in 1968 in Witham. This example is chassis no. 3.
Fitted with a 302ci Ford SVO GT40-specification V8.
The chassis has been upgraded to G10 specification.
SKODA MOTORSPORT - TIDEMAND Pontus - AXELSSON Emil - SKODA Fabia R5 - WRC2.
Service park - 51 Rally catalunya costa daurada - rally de españa
This is a camera toss photograph. Photoshop manipulations = invert colors, minor curves adjustment, minor crop to 3:2 aspect ratio, resize.
Creating some long exposure abstractness with a heartbeat light stencil shot with a camera rotation tool.
Creating some long exposure abstractness with a heartbeat light stencil shot with a camera rotation tool.
CRT 5001 a 3 section articulated L car built by Pullman in 1947. On display at the Fox River Trolley Museum in South Elgin, IL.
I was driving home tonight and while leaving a parking lot of one stripmall I noticed four small old CRT TVs sitting in the corner by the clothing drop box. I had to turn around and take a picture.
I guess since CRTC ruling to transition all over-the-air TV broadcasting to digital, the old analog TVs became useless and I guess some people just dumped them here (it's funny how the sign on the clothing drop box says "NO DUMPING" :)). I really wonder if someone was really watching TV on these sets until recently. The screens here are probably like 10" or even less (notice the height of the curb).
I shot this handheld with camera very close to the ground and with a wide-angle lens (at 17 mm). Most of the light is from the headlights of my car which I parked just outside to the left of the frame.
Seen from the towpath of the Trent & Mersey canal at Westport Lake Moorings, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.