View allAll Photos Tagged Fasteners

it will get covered with crete

Still playing with the MPE-65 with a 2XTC on the front to reduce the min magnification. Series of shots of fasteners on my old gardening waistcoat for a forum challenge. Definately not my normal subject matter :)

Gripple Fastener Kits are versatile hangers that are up to 6 times faster to install than traditional hanging systems and are aesthetically discreet. Each kit consists of a 10' cable with 1 pre-looped and crimped end, along with a Gripple fastener. The pre-looped end requires only 1 fastener to be used and saves time on the jobsite.

 

Product comes in 2 sizes: #2 (max swl - 100 lbs) and #3 (max swl - 200 lbs).

 

More information about this product can be found at

www.carlislehvac.com/product.aspx?id=133

Every single nut bolt and washer will be modelled on this project. I have gone with 12.9 high tensile fasteners at the moment. I suspect this is overkill but only simulation will tell me after the whole under frame is modelled and tested. I can easily change them after I have done bend testing. Originally these were solid rivets fitted white hot and air hammered over.

fastener comes loose and damages prop.

Om Tubes and Fittings is manufacturers, stockiest & suppliers of Monel Fasteners. We, the organization of Om Tubes and Fittings, are a very popular Indian Manufacturer and supplier of high nickel based alloys. We are very proficient in the supply of fasteners. And the specialty of Monel Fastener at Om Tubes is what makes us unique from the rest. One of the main reasons our brand resonates around the world is because the kind of service and delivery we provide to our customers, it is simply incomparable. To prove our quality, we also send the copies of the digital mill test report in accordance with EN10204 NACE 3.1, NACE 3.2 and also the ISO 9001:2008, ISO 14001:2004, OHSAS 18001:2007 Certifications. We proudly assert the fact that, we have 0% rejection rate of our goods in over a decade. The evidence that our goods are authentic and in compliance with ASTM standards supports us immensely. In accordance to the selling of our goods, we also provide after sales support and service, product replacement warranty and also consultancy for alternate sizes of the material. The price rates set for our products are also customer-friendly. As an experienced organization, we always strive to provide and sustain customer satisfaction and also accommodate customized marking as per customer requirement.

Read more about Monel Fasteners: - omtubes.com/monel/monel-fasteners/

 

Fasteners for the bolts that hold the toilet bowl base to the flange. A 1/4-20 brass T bolt broke, and this is the upgrade. A second nut and washer, with the plastic gizmo to hold the nut-cover, goes outside the the bowl base.

 

Left to right: Brass nut, bronze lock washer, stainless steel

washer, (where the flange goes) washer to space back from the back of the flange, 5/16", 18 threads per inch stainless steel carriage bolt.

  

緊固件螺絲 FASTENER SCREWS 銅平頭自攻牙螺絲 M1.4X3 BRASS FLAT HEAD SELF TAPPING SCREWS

Musée Pompidou- by Marcel Jean

macro shot for a school project

Williams Fasteners, was founded in 1870 by the Williams brothers, and was based at Green Lane in Shalesmoor in Sheffield until 1997. The company then relocated to the outskirts of Sheffield near the M1 to make distribution easier. It’s really nice to see it didn’t shut down.

 

This pic is taken from the company website:

 

It is this original site that is currently available to exploration. However the place, with its nooks and crannies, has been purchased for redevelopment and so will probably see workmen starting soon and all the cubbies will be ripped out.

 

One has to wonder if Mr Williams was some kind of obsessive compulsive, everything in its place - kind of a dude. I can just picture him wandering around – not a nut or bolt out place! I’ve never seen so many cupboards in my life!! I found a fair amount of rotting Paperwork

 

I loved this explore. We got disorientated inside and a bit lost in the dark amongst the cuboards. It has the feel of an old family business, lots of cool health and safety posters from the 80s proffering good advice.

 

In 2005 the company changed hands and for the first time the Williams family were no longer a part of the management of this local Sheffield business.

Williams Fasteners, was founded in 1870 by the Williams brothers, and was based at Green Lane in Shalesmoor in Sheffield until 1997. The company then relocated to the outskirts of Sheffield near the M1 to make distribution easier. It’s really nice to see it didn’t shut down.

 

This pic is taken from the company website:

 

It is this original site that is currently available to exploration. However the place, with its nooks and crannies, has been purchased for redevelopment and so will probably see workmen starting soon and all the cubbies will be ripped out.

 

One has to wonder if Mr Williams was some kind of obsessive compulsive, everything in its place - kind of a dude. I can just picture him wandering around – not a nut or bolt out place! I’ve never seen so many cupboards in my life!! I found a fair amount of rotting Paperwork

 

I loved this explore. We got disorientated inside and a bit lost in the dark amongst the cuboards. It has the feel of an old family business, lots of cool health and safety posters from the 80s proffering good advice.

 

In 2005 the company changed hands and for the first time the Williams family were no longer a part of the management of this local Sheffield business.

Looking inside the drainpipe at the rear of the Alexander Hotel, built 1899, in McGregor, Iowa.

This is what my computer desk looks like after a couple of days of crafting. That's my monitor on the box, lifted to keep my neck from hurting.

Yesterday I sewed the button on Day 58's knitted dress. Althea is wearing it as a top under the skirt. I'm a bit irritated at how off center the button wound up, but I'm not sure if it's worth another adjustment on the pattern to make it centered. Who am I kidding? You know I'm going to try it. I also sewed up the back seam in this skirt that has been open for 2-1/2 years now. The waist of the skirt is a bit tight. I've noticed a real tendency over the years to make the waistbands on this kind of skirt too short. There's a bit more room for play on skirts for cloth dolls.

 

Caption from Instagram.

 

Back to uploading past pics. These are from the end of May.

 

Day 59/100

#The100DayProject

Add all fasteners but don't tighten any of them completely...

Possibly the biggest improvement from the original; allows you to fasten the backdrops to the frame via magnets.

A view of the inside of Southwest Fastener's Warehouse and their Indoor Strut Storage.

Still playing with the MPE-65 with a 2XTC on the front to reduce the min magnification. Series of shots of fasteners on my old gardening waistcoat for a forum challenge. Definately not my normal subject matter :)

Williams Fasteners, was founded in 1870 by the Williams brothers, and was based at Green Lane in Shalesmoor in Sheffield until 1997. The company then relocated to the outskirts of Sheffield near the M1 to make distribution easier. It’s really nice to see it didn’t shut down.

 

This pic is taken from the company website:

 

It is this original site that is currently available to exploration. However the place, with its nooks and crannies, has been purchased for redevelopment and so will probably see workmen starting soon and all the cubbies will be ripped out.

 

One has to wonder if Mr Williams was some kind of obsessive compulsive, everything in its place - kind of a dude. I can just picture him wandering around – not a nut or bolt out place! I’ve never seen so many cupboards in my life!! I found a fair amount of rotting Paperwork

 

I loved this explore. We got disorientated inside and a bit lost in the dark amongst the cuboards. It has the feel of an old family business, lots of cool health and safety posters from the 80s proffering good advice.

 

In 2005 the company changed hands and for the first time the Williams family were no longer a part of the management of this local Sheffield business.

Just purchased this lil baby from www.sgcamerastore.com recently. Will be making a bootleg BlackRapid strap version using this and my black Crumpler Industry Disgrace camera strap.

Williams Fasteners, was founded in 1870 by the Williams brothers, and was based at Green Lane in Shalesmoor in Sheffield until 1997. The company then relocated to the outskirts of Sheffield near the M1 to make distribution easier. It’s really nice to see it didn’t shut down.

 

This pic is taken from the company website:

 

It is this original site that is currently available to exploration. However the place, with its nooks and crannies, has been purchased for redevelopment and so will probably see workmen starting soon and all the cubbies will be ripped out.

 

One has to wonder if Mr Williams was some kind of obsessive compulsive, everything in its place - kind of a dude. I can just picture him wandering around – not a nut or bolt out place! I’ve never seen so many cupboards in my life!! I found a fair amount of rotting Paperwork

 

I loved this explore. We got disorientated inside and a bit lost in the dark amongst the cuboards. It has the feel of an old family business, lots of cool health and safety posters from the 80s proffering good advice.

 

In 2005 the company changed hands and for the first time the Williams family were no longer a part of the management of this local Sheffield business.

This paper fastener has an integral thumbscrew clamp for fixing it to a table. The Krimp'it creates a continuous crimp on sheets of paper fed through its two meshing ridged disks. The screw on the top of the device adjusts the gap between the disks to allow for a different number of sheets to be crimped together. Made in Chicago in the early 1930s. Because this model says patent applied for, it predates the issuing of the patent in 1934. It came in a leatherette-covered carry case, presumably for a salesman, that also included a number of order forms for buying the Krimp'it for $4.95 from its maker , Seiders-Mather Corp., 155-165 E. Superior St., Chicago. The salesman would collect $1 at the time of the order, and the buyer then would pay $3.95 plus postage on receiving the Krimp'It.

Industrial fasteners such as socket cap screws have different use in different fields. A number of companies can make socket cap screws depending on customers’ requirement.

Still playing with the MPE-65 with a 2XTC on the front to reduce the min magnification. Series of shots of fasteners on my old gardening waistcoat for a forum challenge. Definately not my normal subject matter :)

Williams Fasteners, was founded in 1870 by the Williams brothers, and was based at Green Lane in Shalesmoor in Sheffield until 1997. The company then relocated to the outskirts of Sheffield near the M1 to make distribution easier. It’s really nice to see it didn’t shut down.

 

This pic is taken from the company website:

 

It is this original site that is currently available to exploration. However the place, with its nooks and crannies, has been purchased for redevelopment and so will probably see workmen starting soon and all the cubbies will be ripped out.

 

One has to wonder if Mr Williams was some kind of obsessive compulsive, everything in its place - kind of a dude. I can just picture him wandering around – not a nut or bolt out place! I’ve never seen so many cupboards in my life!! I found a fair amount of rotting Paperwork

 

I loved this explore. We got disorientated inside and a bit lost in the dark amongst the cuboards. It has the feel of an old family business, lots of cool health and safety posters from the 80s proffering good advice.

 

In 2005 the company changed hands and for the first time the Williams family were no longer a part of the management of this local Sheffield business.

42/120 - Fastened - 120 Pictures in 2020

 

Williams Fasteners, was founded in 1870 by the Williams brothers, and was based at Green Lane in Shalesmoor in Sheffield until 1997. The company then relocated to the outskirts of Sheffield near the M1 to make distribution easier. It’s really nice to see it didn’t shut down.

 

This pic is taken from the company website:

 

It is this original site that is currently available to exploration. However the place, with its nooks and crannies, has been purchased for redevelopment and so will probably see workmen starting soon and all the cubbies will be ripped out.

 

One has to wonder if Mr Williams was some kind of obsessive compulsive, everything in its place - kind of a dude. I can just picture him wandering around – not a nut or bolt out place! I’ve never seen so many cupboards in my life!! I found a fair amount of rotting Paperwork

 

I loved this explore. We got disorientated inside and a bit lost in the dark amongst the cuboards. It has the feel of an old family business, lots of cool health and safety posters from the 80s proffering good advice.

 

In 2005 the company changed hands and for the first time the Williams family were no longer a part of the management of this local Sheffield business.

Mail art from Hazel in 1983 when we were courting.

Over the past 40 years Tower Fasteners has become a leader in the field of fastener distribution and inventory management systems. Tower Fastener's asked TRITEC and WFC Architects to help with a remodel of their building.

 

Extensive work had to be done on the infrastructure of the existing facility including a complicated masonry remediation plan replacing more than 1,000 sq. ft. of the Brick facade. Once this work was complete phased renovations of the lobby, common areas and executive areas all went underway. This included massive amounts of millwork panels that extend through the entire facility.

 

The results of this project were photographed by Steve Geraci of Reflex Photo.

 

part of the sewing stuff I inherited from Charlie Sulmoni's mother in the 1980s.

YAY, finished this today!

Ceramic tile, glass, glitter tiles, pearls and bead for fastener.

White grout with a little maroon acrylic mixed in.

SOLD

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