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not for the feint of heart

A section of rusty cable.

Commemorative plaque on The Cable House, Promenade, Newbiggin by the Sea, Northumberland. Shame about the grammar.

 

The Great Northern Telegraph Company's submarine cable from Marstrand, Sweden, came ashore just east of here at The Point.

 

The Cable House closed in 1960 when telegraphy operations ceased.

San Francisco Cable Car (Konica S2, scanned Minolta DS IV)

reference class speaker cable

Holiday Decorated

 

Connect your iPod to Pioneer’s AVIC-F700BT or AVIC-F900BT in-dash navigation receivers

 

Compatible with:

 

iPod touch / iPod touch 2G

iPhone

iPhone 3G

iPod nano 3rd generation

iPod nano 4th generation

iPod 5th generation

iPod classic(80GB 120GB 160GB)

iPod video

iPod photo

 

www.b2c-support.com/ipod-audiovideo-pioneer-avicf700bt-f9...

Cable Beach, Broome WA

Locating lost socapex cables by licking.

 

9V battery connected to the pins 1 and 2.

After this we licked various socapex cables to find the one that is connected to the battery.

easy , cheap and works well

 

Warning: never lick cables ends that you are not sure about.

Miranda Avilés (Ast.)

What a difference from a DVI->VGA connection, the new toy is crystal clear now.

Constructed from an XLR plug and an iPod shuffle USB cable, this will

allow me to use nicer microphones for recording in the field with

Voice Memos or other apps.

Factory built in around 1912 for local man Harold W. Smith, specialising in cables and cabling for the mining industry. One of only four works in the country that could produce braided electrical cables at the outbreak of the First World War, as a result was awarded contracts from the Ministry of War producing parts for the 'D mk III' field telephone.

The workforce grew from 40 [1912] to 650 as well as works operating on a double shift pattern for the duration of the war. By 1918, 15,000 miles of electrical cable had been produced.

Post war slump resulted in the 'H. W. Smith & Co' works going into administration. Works bought by 'Edison Swan Electric Co' [later 'Associated Electrical Company' and Siemens] to produce power lines cabling.

During the Second World War, the works had [again!] one of the four machines in the country able to produce lead tubes. These tubes were used in the construction of 'PLUTO' 'Pipe-Line Underwater Transportation of Oil' / 'Pipe-Lines Under the Ocean' which were fuel lines between the Isle of Wight and France to support the invasion of Normandy, 'Operation Overlord'.

The cable works closed in 1966 and was bought by a paper & cardboard company 'Reed Paper Group' who manufactured packaging.

The factory closed in the mid-1990s.

 

Further reading;

rcsigs.ca/index.php/Telephone_Set_D_Mk_III

wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Pluto

forest-of-dean.net/fodmembers/index.php?mode=thread&id=6614#p6626

Harbour Front, Singapore

The only time I appreciate pylons

Foot of Hyde Street

Hesitations before the climb.

I hate having to unpick this

Cable Car Ride to Sentosa Island, Singapore

formato horizontal-lineas

Taken from the back seat of a North American SNJ that was giving rides during the Aviation Art and Food Truck Fly-In at Cable Airport.

Cable Mill Barn in Cades Cove TN GSMNP Great Smoky Mountain National Park

a collaboration with Jennifer Brookes:

35mm colour Fuji film through Pentax Spotmatic II

sent to jennifer who 'souped' it in lemon juice, tea and detergent

 

scanned negatives inverted, nothing else

Knit in the round on 4mm needles. Yarn is Sirdar Country Style in Slate Blue. 3 x 100g balls required. Pattern is called "Gathered Pullover" and is available for download from the Interweave Knits Website.

Of the five HDMI cable types available, which is best for your home entertainment or business needs? This article will introduce you to basic specs and connect you with a resource in the San Francisco Bay Area that can help you get the components you need to make your AV set up rock. Read the whole article: HDMI Cable Types - Which One is Right for you?

A striking of blend titanium and black diamonds.

Factory built in around 1912 for local man Harold W. Smith, specialising in cables and cabling for the mining industry. One of only four works in the country that could produce braided electrical cables at the outbreak of the First World War, as a result was awarded contracts from the Ministry of War producing parts for the 'D mk III' field telephone.

The workforce grew from 40 [1912] to 650 as well as works operating on a double shift pattern for the duration of the war. By 1918, 15,000 miles of electrical cable had been produced.

Post war slump resulted in the 'H. W. Smith & Co' works going into administration. Works bought by 'Edison Swan Electric Co' [later 'Associated Electrical Company' and Siemens] to produce power lines cabling.

During the Second World War, the works had [again!] one of the four machines in the country able to produce lead tubes. These tubes were used in the construction of 'PLUTO' 'Pipe-Line Underwater Transportation of Oil' / 'Pipe-Lines Under the Ocean' which were fuel lines between the Isle of Wight and France to support the invasion of Normandy, 'Operation Overlord'.

The cable works closed in 1966 and was bought by a paper & cardboard company 'Reed Paper Group' who manufactured packaging.

The factory closed in the mid-1990s.

 

Further reading;

rcsigs.ca/index.php/Telephone_Set_D_Mk_III

wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Pluto

forest-of-dean.net/fodmembers/index.php?mode=thread&id=6614#p6626

I don't know how people can live like this. As I heard from someone at

work: it's cable managment that separates us from the monkeys.

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