View allAll Photos Tagged Deflectors
August 18, 2015: Lenovo Thinkpads are great machines but they do run HOT. I've used an inverted cookie sheet for ages to keep from roasting my lap but even so my left leg still gets toasted. If I was totally anal I might have done a CAD rendering and printed a nifty clip-on scoop but hey, it's me! On the occasion of the temperatures reaching 105 degrees outside I bent up this aluminum 'scoop' to redirect the fan's hot exhaust up and away from my leg. Took 5 min. It works!
Some pictures from De Herdgang of the pres season friendly between Jong PSV v Darlington
The Quakers did themselves proud with a battling performance against PSV Eindhoven’s under 23 side at De Herdgang, the training HQ of Dutch giants PSV Eindhoven.
While Quakers adjusted to the heat, the 4G conditions, and their full time opponents, PSV quickly got into their stride, and were awarded a penalty on 7 minutes when keeper Jonny Maddison tripped Bertalan Kun, but the keeper pulled off a fantastic save from Laursen’s penalty, throwing himself to his left to keep the ball out, to the great cheers of the 300+ travelling Darlington supporters at that end.
While David Syers was off the field receiving treatment, PSV scored on 28 minutes. Lonwijk played a one-two down the right, ran into the box, and curled a left foot shot that took a slight deflection beyond Maddison.
But Quakers replied within a minute, to everyone’s delight. Styche dribbled past three men and his shot was deflected over the bar for a corner. Wheatley curled the corner over from the right, and Collins rose above everyone and headed the ball over the line.
But just on half time, PSV went in front again, when Theunissen curled the ball past Maddison from the edge of the area, although Quakers claimed that there was a handball in the build up, and a free kick given against them when it should have been the other way.
PSV went 3-1 up when sub Robin Schoonbrood picked the ball up on the 18 yard line, sidestepped a challenge, and curled the ball into the bottom corner.
Quakers kept going right to the end and did themselves a huge amount of credit in the eyes of their full time professional hosts and travelling fans, and they deserved the loud applause when they went across to thank the travelling fans on the final whistle.
darlingtonfootballclub.co.uk/fc-de-jong-v-darlington-upda...
Detail from the left panel of the Triptych of MARTYRS OF THE CITIES OF THE PLAIN, the Feminine Entelechy. The transcription of the writing above is below:
[CHANCE]
I am the grid through which all light passes...engaging, deflecting, arching and arcing, shaping and shattering...distorting, imploding. I am the personification of chaos...nothing escapes my whim....I am a fabric of infinite connection...intersecting threads of energy and fibers of light....I am chance, the matrix of Desire...a grid of occurrence and interstices of silence....I am freedom...monstrous egalitarian freedom...microcosm of that which is....All inclusive, revealed in light and recorded by sign...I am that which happens....I am movement and moment...shift and drift...creator of all that is....Impetus and outcome...catalyst and qualifier....I am the intelligence of process....Moving from catalysis to catalysis I perform the rituals of Chaos....With Desire, in a mad tango of possibility, I weave the obtect of Being...and becoming....In occupation of the void, I am measured by outcome....Omnipresent, in constant occurrence only that which pertains is observed...only that which is sought is found....Yet I am everywhere...and I am always....Through me is chaos processed....Between the colliding motes lies the flux of possibility...that which is called time...invention of Being....It is time that provides the cadence...the beat of chaos...the rhythms of process....And it is time that filters the space of becoming. It is time that occupies the interstices of the grid and measures the distance from macros to micros...infinity to infinity...through time is Being reflected and contained....Invented by Being...protector and processor of Being...apologist and explainer, it distorts and preserved, creating cosmos out of chaos...the chambered pupa of Being....I move through the obtect to be internalized in the form of gods and fortune...my raiment as varied as the reflections of chaos....I serve each manifestation of Being with omniscience and omnipresence. I am absolute convenience and conveyance...I am chance, the entelechy of chaos....But it is time that conceives. It is time, invention of Being, that deceives being...Transposed from the interstices of chaos...interpreted as distance, lines, spheres, spirals, cycles, time is relative...It is an art....Within the structures of Being, the flux of possibility is reified...opacified into chunks of measurable substance...forced into molds commensurate to the hierarchy of comprehension. It is confusing and conflicted and...like all art...solipsistic....Time is the tragedy of Being, placing Chance at specific points of intersection, distorting process, collapsing the sphere of comprehension into a line of simplistic definition...Time distorts reflected chaos through the lens of desire into the chambered grid, contorting light with grotesqueries of shadow....As light moves freely through the outer infinities of chaos it is shadow that controls the inner infinity of Being...forcing light to illuminate the pygmy dance of comprehension...twisting light to shape the unexplainable into tapestries of fantastic decoration....“There are no accidents!” proclaims Being in its weaving and warping of process....But being itself is an accident...a minute intersection in the grid of chaos...and Being does not exist at all....Chance is omnipotent from the colliding galaxies of chaos to the reflected infinities of Being...It is chance that sets the grids and forces the awakening of desire....I am that which happens throughout the infinities of isness...I am complete and irrevocable...a conflation of energy and light too large for Being’s mirror...reflected, I am a fragment of miscreant compose.
"MARTYRS OF THE CITIES OF THE PLAIN examines the First Holocaust. Based on the blue triangle that descends the back panel of PROCRUSTES IN SITU, the third section of the Trilogy concerns itself with the destruction of the cities Admah, Gomorrah, Sodom, and Zeboiim which the Old Testament attributes to the wrath of God. It examines the procrustean constrictions of patriarchy and the liberating challenge of feminine entelechy through the songs of Procrustes and the opposing chants of Chance, Being, and Desire. Masculine gestalt versus feminine insurrection." Robert Cremean
Collection:
Fresno Art Museum
Fresno, California
Hehe.......first time I'm clever enough to get two photos together...put this new found skill into action again one day!😆...........more to follow?
Rear Window Air Deflector detail.
Seen at the :
Morris - Lions Car Show.
Route 6 & Tabler Road
Morris, Illinois.
Grundy County, USA
10-13-2013
Ordered 2003 Corolla Rain Deflectors, was sent 2006, but in this temporary (scotch tape) install, you can see they will work, but not just the exact fit. It's a difference I think I can live with though.
WASHINGTON, DC - April 15, 2011: New York Rangers defenseman Marc Staal (#18) deflects a shot in front of Washington Capitals defenseman John Carlson (#74) and the Capitals net during Game Two of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals NHL playoff series at Verizon Center.
For more, read the "Suite! Another Playoff Win" blog post on clydeorama.com.
Winterthur, Switzerland, August 2011
Single strobe camera left shooting through Deep Octa 70cm with gold deflector, inner, and outer baffle at f/8. Trigrip with golden reflector model right.
• NIKON D700 • ¹⁄₂₅₀ sec at f/8.0 (0 EV) • ISO 200 • Pattern metering • Manual • no flash • 70-200 mm f/2.8 @ 200 mm •
• NIKON D700 // AF-S Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8G ED VR II at 200 mm (VR Off) // Exposure - 1/250 @ f/8.0 (0EV), ISO 200 // Multi-segment metering, Manual exposure // White Balance - 5560K // AF - On, AF-C, Dynamic Area (9 points), Primary AF Point - E9, Used AF Point - (none) // Shooting Mode - Single-Frame // FOV - 9.3 deg (0.32 m), Focus Distance - 2.00 m, DOF - 0.04 m (1.97 - 2.02), Hyperfocal - 166.41 m // Nikon NEF Compressed, 14bit, Adobe RGB •
2011-08-13-0147-4567
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
Copyright © 2011 yOOrek
PictionID:52512795 - Catalog:14_028051 - Title:GD/Astronautics Facilities Details: Inspection Photos on Flame Deflector After Test #195 Date: 01/31/1958 - Filename:14_028051.tif - Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
I was chopping down some elephant grass in the front yard, and after my Craftsman handsaw had difficulty cutting it, I tried using my Fiskars (AKA Gerber) Brush Hook machete, and a chop deflected it up off the hard grass, and into my hand before I could react. I had a lanyard on the sharp knife to act as a mechanical advantage as a longer lever for greater force; with a half grip on the very end of the handle with the 550 cord lanyard around the wrist aiding in the retention of the chopper.
The bad news is, this also caused me to be unable to release the knife as it deflected, and the momentum continued it into my hand, before I could react it had hit me.
I was unable to stop, much like when you think you can brace yourself for a car impact, but later when it happens you find out that you can't.
I felt the impact, which was a numbing in my hand. I was afraid to look at first, and I hoped I had been hit below the blade at the top of the handle, because it was numb and didn't hurt very bad.
I looked and saw that I'd been cut, realizing the straite edge at the bottom of the blade did it. If it had been closer to the end when it impacted, it would have been a force multiplier for greater damage. Worse still at the very end, where the hook is. It has a curved edge, and causes a shearing affect as it cuts, because the curve causes all the energy to be focused on a smaller area which moves as the curve forces it to as it chops, much like a kurkri.
I tried to hold my hand steady to minimize bleeding.
I was chopping down some elephant grass in the front yard with my Craftsman handsaw but had difficulty cutting it. It is very difficult to cut down, it's as strong as small bamboo. If it's not cut down every spring, it will die.
I tried using my Fiskars (AKA Gerber) Brush Hook machete, and a chop deflected it up off the hard grass and into my hand before I could react. I had a lanyard on the sharp knife to act as a mechanical advantage as a longer lever for greater force; with a half grip on the very end of the handle with the 550 cord lanyard around the wrist aiding in the retention of the chopper.
The bad news is, this also caused me to be unable to release the knife as it deflected, and the momentum continued it into my hand, before I could react it had hit me. I was unable to stop, much like when you think you can brace yourself for a car impact, but later when it happens you find out that you can't.
I felt the impact, which was a numbing in my hand. I was afraid to look at first, and I hoped I had been hit below the blade at the top of the handle, because it was numb and didn't hurt very bad.
I looked and saw that I'd been cut, realizing the strait edge at the bottom of the blade did it. If it had been closer to the end when it impacted, it would have been a force multiplier for greater damage. Worse still if it had hit at the very end, where the hook is. It has a curved edge, and causes a shearing affect as it cuts. The curve causes all the energy to be focused on a smaller area which moves as the curve forces it to as it impacts, much like a kurkri.I might have lost fingers or my hand if it had hit there.
I tried to hold my hand steady to minimize bleeding, and hurried to the house, leaving a dripping blood trail on the way.
Dad drove me to the hospital, and I ended up getting 9 stitches. The numbing solution they injected me with felt like boiling water.
Just another example of our willingness to accommodate the needs and wants of our customers. This 2011 Ram has custom wheels, A/T beefy tires, mud flaps, body colour painted cap for the box, a wind deflector, lift kit, bug deflector, tinted windows - a custom beauty!
Here is another view of the main flame deflector. In this photo the SRB flame deflectors are still approximately in their launch position.
I was talking to this young lady as we walked up Temple Street. I was off to the bus stop on Hill (to the right in the photo), and she was going the opposite direction. I asked her if I could photograph her parasol and she said yes. I had forgotten I had a couple of shots of this already, but she and her parasol got lost in the crowd. I'm glad I got this closer shot, even if it was with my PowerShot, the last photo taken at this rally.
- Magnaflow Exhaust
- AFE Intake
- Stampede Smoke Side Deflectors
- Stampede Smoke Hood Deflector
- Aries Stainless Bull Bar
- Gatorback Chev Bowtie Mudflaps
This is my modified PTR91 (H&K91 Clone) This PTR91 has PSG90 Rails welded on the side for stability. It has a brass deflector welded on to adjust brass ejection to a reasonable 7'. The rifle also has an AR style lower with a Hogue grip, Magpul PRS2, it also has a few other accessories, along with an XS 50 round drum (.308). All done in Kryptek Typhoon. The pattern is designed to retain the black rifle look, but add depth to the rifle. It also has a Trijicon 3.5 ACOG.
I also want to thank Drowning Ink Customs for their hard work on this project. They coated over 20 magazines, two drums, all the accessories, two complete lowers and stocks (the Rifle also has a collapsible stock and normal H&K Lower). All the patterns match between parts, which is very hard to do and most shops do not take the time and effort to match pattern lines from piece to piece. It has Duracoat on most of the parts, with Duracoat High Temp coatings on the upper, barrel etc. It also have Cerekote Slick coating on the insides to reduce friction and prevent mucking from repeated firings, along with trigger work from Springfield Trigger Works.
The welding was done by John, a US Vet and gunsmith.
I want to thank all the individuals that put hours and hours of their time into this project!
Goalie Olivier Mantha deflects the puck off of his glove during the game against Lake Superior State University on Friday, October 31 at the Sullivan Arena. Photo by Adam Eberhardt/The Northern Light.
The main deflector dish and spike are replicas constructed from study of photographs, as the originals were lost prior to 1974.
The main deflector dish and spike are replicas constructed from study of photographs, as the originals were lost prior to 1974. Note the gray "space dust" coating all forward-facing surfaces. The third "box" surrounding the deflector, which should be on the left side of the model, was never installed since that side of the ship was not meant to be seen on camera.
Close up of spray deflector being used for insect control. Kaniksu National Forest, Idaho.
Photo by: W.E. Steuerwald
Date: June 20, 1953
Credit: National Archives and Records Administration
RG# 95-GP Records of the Forest Service General Subject Files USDA Forest Service Negative Number: 473524
NARA image: 95-GP-5037-Box0853_024_001_AC
For related historic forest entomology photos, stories, and resources see the Western Forest Insect Work Conference site: wfiwc.org/content/history-and-resources
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, R6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth/.
This is my modified PTR91 (H&K91 Clone) This PTR91 has PSG90 Rails welded on the side for stability. It has a brass deflector welded on to adjust brass ejection to a reasonable 7'. The rifle also has an AR style lower with a Hogue grip, Magpul PRS2, it also has a few other accessories, along with an XS 50 round drum (.308). All done in Kryptek Typhoon. The pattern is designed to retain the black rifle look, but add depth to the rifle. It also has a Trijicon 3.5 ACOG.
I also want to thank Drowning Ink Customs for their hard work on this project. They coated over 20 magazines, two drums, all the accessories, two complete lowers and stocks (the Rifle also has a collapsible stock and normal H&K Lower). All the patterns match between parts, which is very hard to do and most shops do not take the time and effort to match pattern lines from piece to piece. It has Duracoat on most of the parts, with Duracoat High Temp coatings on the upper, barrel etc. It also have Cerekote Slick coating on the insides to reduce friction and prevent mucking from repeated firings, along with trigger work from Springfield Trigger Works.
The welding was done by John, a US Vet and gunsmith.
I want to thank all the individuals that put hours and hours of their time into this project!
This is my modified PTR91 (H&K91 Clone) This PTR91 has PSG90 Rails welded on the side for stability. It has a brass deflector welded on to adjust brass ejection to a reasonable 7'. The rifle also has an AR style lower with a Hogue grip, Magpul PRS2, it also has a few other accessories, along with an XS 50 round drum (.308). All done in Kryptek Typhoon. The pattern is designed to retain the black rifle look, but add depth to the rifle. It also has a Trijicon 3.5 ACOG.
I also want to thank Drowning Ink Customs for their hard work on this project. They coated over 20 magazines, two drums, all the accessories, two complete lowers and stocks (the Rifle also has a collapsible stock and normal H&K Lower). All the patterns match between parts, which is very hard to do and most shops do not take the time and effort to match pattern lines from piece to piece. It has Duracoat on most of the parts, with Duracoat High Temp coatings on the upper, barrel etc. It also have Cerekote Slick coating on the insides to reduce friction and prevent mucking from repeated firings, along with trigger work from Springfield Trigger Works.
The welding was done by John, a US Vet and gunsmith.
I want to thank all the individuals that put hours and hours of their time into this project!
Toyota Corolla 2003 to 2006 Rain Deflectors installed on a Gen1 Toyota Prius.
Here you can see the permanent install. They are not a perfect fit, but they do work well enough for me anyhow.
PictionID:52720219 - Catalog:14_029124 - Title:GD/Astronautics Details: Atlas B; Flame Deflector Date: 10/22/1957 - Filename:14_029124.tif - Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum