View allAll Photos Tagged Engineer
These were stuffed in a half-open drawer. I didn't see a date, but calling WLW part of the Crosley Corporation probably ended in 1945 when The Crosley Corporation was sold to The Aviation Corporation (source: hawkins.pair.com/wlw.shtml).
Just before closing the folder, I found this picture which I consider will be a classic if everything goes well with The Explorer Company (I hope). In the picture, myself, Wilfredo, and Ritamar (Wilfredo's girlfriend).
Engineer's view on a Russian Decapod. Although not fully intact, this engine's cab has fared better than some static display steamers.
Locomotive: SLSF 1632
6-18-09
Belton, MO
Mar. 14, 2020 in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photos by
Spc. Kat Del Rio, 196th Transportation Company)
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
My Uncle Kamesh Gadepally, Me, and Shri Dr. Gopal Rao and his wife. I meet Dr. Gopal Rao at one of the family social gathering in LA. Outlines of Chemical Engineering By Dryden, edited by Gopal Rao, is one of the widely read book in the Chemical Engineering field. It was really a great opportunity to meet him. Interestingly, Dr. Ranjan Malik(my guide at IIT-Bombay) studied under him at IIT Kanpur.
The Silver Dollar City Express makes an unscheduled stop to change engineers. That must be a unique line on a resume these days, "Engineer on a steam locomotive"
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
Mar. 14, 2020 in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photos by
Spc. Kat Del Rio, 196th Transportation Company)
Noble Park, on 1100 9th Ave North, was also undergoing changes. This park was originally the designated park for the Snug Harbor housing subdivision that was created in 1943 by the Mainland Company (City of Texas City, 1995). Named for Earl L. Noble, the Texas City mayor from 1926 to 1932, the park acquired a Shay steam locomotive and caboose, on loan from the Galveston Railroad Museum. The museum agreed to loan these in exchange for having another of their steam engines repaired by a Texas City company, Dunn Heat Exchangers. The Texas Kiwanis Club constructed a replica of a train depot on the site, and a fountain was built in Mexico and donated by the League of United Latin American Citizens, or LULAC. All these were dedicated on September 16, 1995 (Simsen, 1995).
Piping Technology & Products, Inc., custom designed and fabricated a collection of constants for an oil refinery in New Jersey. This application required the use of suspended constants, 100-C and base constants, 200-F.
In order to support the lines at the oil refinery, PT&P designed the 100-C constant spring hangers (vertical constants suspended from beams) at two different loads and total travels. The 100-C constant with a load of 105,000-lbs. and total travel of 6" (figure 1) is set to travel 1-3/4" down and 1-15/16" up. It is 38-3/8" in width, 79-1/4" in height and furnished with a double lug suspension to allow it to hang from a double point suspension beam.
In comparison to the aforementioned constant, this particular 100-C constant spring hanger (figure 2) has a load of 33,000 lbs. and a total travel of 4-1/2", 3/8" up and 1-1/2" down. This specific constant is 24-1/4" in width, 71" in height and also furnished with a double lug suspension to suspend from a double point suspension beam. Although the dimensions of these two constants are similar, the size of the springs and cams are very different.
Opposed to the 100-C constant, the 200-F constant spring hanger is a horizontal constant used to support piping from below. These 200-F constant spring hangers were designed with loads of 40,750 lbs. and total travels of 4-1/2", 3/8" up and 1-3/4" down. These constants will be used in conjunction with sway struts to support pipelines at the oil refinery.
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
Mar. 14, 2020 in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photos by
Spc. Kat Del Rio, 196th Transportation Company)
A visual representation on the tags used on The Engineered Boulderer.
Linkage: Go to www.aharef.info/2006/05/websites_as_graphs.htm , take a screenshot and tag it "websitesasgraphs".
Inspired by Binary Bonzai, Graphized. There are some similarities, most visibly the grey cluster to the left (at the top on the Binary Bonzai graph). Somehow I just think my site seems much less structured that the BB. Maybe that could be a goal too when making new pages...
Teens Engineer BHM teaches East Lake Branch Library's young patrons how to program and create remote robotics cars.
Mar. 14, 2020, in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Maria Henderson, 204th Public Affairs Detachment)
Mar. 14, 2020 in Orlando, Fla.
(U.S. Army Reserve photos by
Spc. Kat Del Rio, 196th Transportation Company)
Sgt. Terry Bears, 758th Engineer Co. Miami, Fla. calls down measurements during an initial assessment of attic ductwork on Nov. 5 as part of an Innovative Readiness Training exercise. The 20 Soldiers from 758th Vertical Construction Engineer Co., Miami Fla. worked with local charity, "Rebuilding Together" to repair and upgrade Willie and Alvina Jenkins' home to make it safe and handicap accessible.
Us civil engineers seem to have slipped a few notches from the good ole days. Maybe we can get ourselves into a few parades again ... ya know, return to the glory days. LOL
My wife surfs ebay for all sorts of things, and she's constantly trying to find engineer or civil engineer memorabilia. Seems that sort of thing is rarer than hen's teeth. But she surely hit the jackpot with this one.
What's funny is this print is only 2.5" X 1.5". Tiny. I scanned this in at 1200 dpi, and it was still only 5mb.
Vehicles assigned to the 878th Engineer Vertical Construction Company, 105th Engineer Battalion, move to a staging area to be ready to dispatch at a moment’s notice on Oak Island, North Carolina, Aug. 5, 2020. The North Carolina National Guard deployed teams across the Eastern portion of the state to assist civilians and North Carolina Emergency Management with damage inflicted by Hurricane Isaias. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Lisa Vines, 382nd Public Affairs Detachment/Released)(U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Lisa Vines, 382nd Public Affairs Detachment/Released)