View allAll Photos Tagged LeDuc
This strange aircraft was fitted with a ramjet that produced high thrust with great technical simplicity, albeit only at high speeds. It also had a turbojet engine for the low speed phases. The ramjet then took over and could accelerate the plane to up to 2500 km/h. The pilot was seated in a frustrum-shaped capsule of perspex that could be jettisoned in case of an emergency and would then serve as a rescue pod.
Seen at the musée de l'air et de l'espace, Paris.
Camera: Nikon FM2n
Lens: Cosina Voigtländer Ultron 40 f/2 SL II ASPH
Film: Kodak Portra 400 professional grade colour negative film
Developed and scanned by www.meinfilmlab.de
Instagram: instagram.com/pedramveisi
Facebook: www.facebook.com/PedramVeisi
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/PedramVeisi/
Twitter: twitter.com/Pedram
Google+: plus.google.com/u/0/+PedramVeisi
Ozias Leduc (Saint-Hilaire, 1864 - Saint Hyacinthe, 1955) The Young Student (1894)
Ottawa (National Gallery of Canada)
Leduc 022 1957
Echelle/Scale 1/72
Scratchbuilt
(Quelques modifications et nouvelles photos / Some modifications and new photos)
Leduc Bus Lines is based in Rockland, Ontario.
Leduc 3940 is a 2014 Prevost H3-45 highway bus.
Leduc 3940 at the Cracker Barrel restaurant in Dickinson, NY on Monday, October 30th, 2017.
Just today, Leduc County declared Agricultural Disaster due to the extreme drought in the area and joins several other counties across the province that are struggling with drought and grasshopper infestations.
Canola Field
Leduc County, Alberta, Canada
Alberta Wheat Pool
I arrived here in sunshine and saw dark clouds far off to the north. This system was heading south, and fast. It was on top of L.A. in 25 mins or less and the rain came down hard. It was a good rain though, nicely refreshing and cleansing.
Canada's Historic Places - Alberta Wheat Pool Grain Elevator Site Complex, Leduc
Drilled in 1947 this was Alberta's first oil well. The discovery would be the seminal event in the Canadian oil industry. By the end of 1947, 147 more wells were drilled in the Leduc–Woodbend oilfield resulting in a 300–million-barrel discovery. The original well, Leduc #1, was capped in 1974. It produced 300,000 barrels of oil and 9 million cubic metres of natural gas.