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Engine 322 - A 1987 Pierce Lance Engine. Refurbished in 2007. This is our back-up, mutual aid and FAST Team Engine. It has a 1500 GPM Waterous Pump and a 1000 gal tank. The 8 man cab is outfitted with 911 seats for the officer and 4 firefighters, there are also two fold down seats in the rear. It has 150 foot, 200 foot and 250 foot preconnected 1.75" attack lines as well as 250 of 2.5" attack line. For high rise and long stretches, there is 250 foot of 2.5" line with a gated wye to be used with two high rise packs with 150 foot of 1.5" hose per. A 35' extension 14' roof ladders and an attic ladder are used for ventilation and rescue along with a Cutter Edge Ventilation Saw and a full accompaniment of handtools. With this engine being our FAST Team Engine, it also has a variety of rescue rope and additional handtools.
STIHL Trimmers & Parts display @ PANTHER EAST - The Largest STIHL Dealer Location In Pennsylvania!
Panther East Official STIHL Site: www.PantherEast.NET
Home Page: www.PantherEast.COM
Lindstrom 7190 Micro-Bevel Side Cutter (at the centrer, white handle)
FRI-DA-REM Flat Nose Pliers (yellow handle)
(all Knipex pliers, clockwise, after the Fri-Da-Rem)
Knipex 32 11 135 Relay Adjusting Pliers
Knipex 32 21 135 Relay Adjusting Pliers
Knipex 64 62 120 Electronics Oblique End Cutting Nipper - mini-blade
Knipex 77 42 115 Electronics Diagonal Cutter - pointed head
Knipex 77 22 115 Electronics Diagonal Cutter - round head
Knipex 64 52 115 Electronics Oblique End Cutting Nipper - short head
Knipex 78 03 125 Electronic Super Knips - Cutting Pliers
Knipex 35 32 115 Electronics Round Nose Pliers
Knipex 11 92 140 Electronics Wire Stripper
Knipex 35 62 145 Electronics Flat Nose Pliers
Side note: The FRI-DA-REM pliers is by far the oldest one I show here. It was not new when it was given to me as a boy, and I have it for some 25 years now.
I can't find any useful information about the FRI-DA-REM brand on the web, so I now nothing about it.
I ended up later buying all those Knipex pliers, because I tried for years find a replacement for the old FRI-DA-REM pliers, and the closest I've found was the Relay Adjusting Pliers from Knipex, and even those have not such a thin flat nose as the FRI-DA-REM one. All others came later.
The School begins classes once each year, early in October. Students are divided into sections of 12 students each, and get two hours of classroom instruction and six hours of shop instruction per day, Monday through Friday 8am - 5pm.
Basic Boatbuilding is the focus of the first semester, which runs from early October to late December.
The instructors assume that most, if not all, students have no woodworking skills and proceed from that assumption. The skills taught in the first semester are those essential to boatbuilding, and the course, for that reason, is very "hands-on".
Students learn to sharpen and use all their tools, and participate in a wide range of individual skill-building exercises, from learning to make the joints commonly used in boatbuilding to a series of tools. Students learn to draft and make a half-model. Then, working in pairs, they learn to loft a boat full-size on the floor. Finally, working, together as a team, the semester culminates in December as students work together to build a flat-bottomed skiff.
This is a student's shoulder box, or tool chest.
The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding is located in Port Hadlock WA and is a private, accredited non-profit vocational school.
Our mission is to teach and preserve the skills and crafts of fine wooden boatbuilding and other traditional maritime crafts.
You can find us on the web at www.nwboatschool.org .
You can reach us via e-mail at info@nwboatschool.org or by calling us at 360-385-4948
Copyright Robert W. Dickinson. Unauthorized use of this image without my express permission is a violation of copyright law.
Taken as part of an Arizona Insider Studio model shoot on April 9, 2011 in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Canon 60D and Canon 17-55mm f2.8 IS lens. I supplied the torque wrench. One monolight camera left with a medium softbox and one monolight camera right with a medium softbox. The power levels were not recorded (there were four lighting setups in the maintenance garage, so I didn't keep track of their settings). The monolights were triggered with my Pocket Wizard. ISO 100, f5.6 at 1/125 second. Very minor post-processing work in Portrait Professional. I cleaned up a few things in Photoshop CS4 and added a Levels layer. I used a Portrait Sharpen layer in onOne, a Cool Edges layer in onOne, and CS4 was used to create the vignette.
This was a fun shoot. First time with this group.
Model: Jesika, MM# 1052304
Wardrobe and hair stylist: Julia, MM# 350023
Makeup: Jennifer O'Bannon (don't have a MM#)
My MM#: 1838217