View allAll Photos Tagged Load
Loading timber part way up the Novat branch on the forest line above Viseu-de-sus. The mud was everywhere, and typical of forestry operations. An unrepeatable scene as this branch has since been abandoned.
The remote coal operation at Cwmbargoed near Merthyr Tydfil in South Wales is one of the last operating coal mines in UK and will soon be confined to the history books. I believe the reserves will be exhausted by around 2022. The coal is used for Port Talbot and Scunthorpe steel works and for the cement industry at Hope in Derbyshire. The last coal sent to Aberthaw was in early 2016. There is another coal deposit, Nant Llesg, north of Fochriw and Pontlottyn with around 12 years of reserves, which the Company wants to mine, but alas planning permission for that has been rejected.
In this scene, 66014 loads up with coal for the return journey to Margam on the 6C94. The conveyor belt above the train is discharging washed and blended coal to the stockpile. In the foreground is stockpiled coal for processing from the nearby Fros Y Fran open pit.
Load Haul Class 56 56021 eases away from Briton Ferry with the 6Z40 ThO 18:00 Baglan Bay to Stalybridge AtoChem Sidings.
All images on this site are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed written permission of the photographer. All rights reserved – Copyright Don Gatehouse
[[[[[[[[[Loading temporary log file]]]]]]]]]
[[[[[[[[[Sergeant Deillion, 26th Legion]]]]]]]]]
Koda Station. Filled to the brim with clankers, all waiting to be cleared out by us. The prisoner's being delivered soon, and we need to make sure this place is a lot less ferrous infested.
[]End of audio file[]
"Sergeant!"
"Yes sir?"
"Plans indicate that there's a back entrance into the station. Secure it, and do so quitely."
"Copy that, will do."
"Alright, good luck soldier."
[[[[[[[[[Reloading audio log]]]]]]]]
Seems simple enough, right? The entrance was only guarded by a lone droid. I stealthily crept up behind him, pulling my vibroblade. The stupid clanker never had a chance, not after I slashed his mechanical head clean off. Time to enter this station, and see if I can make it through this mission alive.....
Journaling reads: Blue
Blue is the color of the sky and sea.
Considered to be beneficial to the body.
Blue produces feelings of calmness and tranquility.
A Marine from Force Reconnaissance Platoon loads rounds into a magazine during close quarter tactics shooting at the Kaneohe Bay range training facility, Hawaii, May 13. Capt. Brian VanHoose, the platoon commander and a native of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, said their shooting drills are practice for enemy raids.
(U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Suzanne Lapi)
Uploaded by : Darren Friedrichsen
The ride I pilot for White Trucking in Hadar, NE set up in a North Dakota pasture to load bees for Cali
A fully loaded motorcycle truck vehicle going on the road from Ho Chi Minh to Trà Vinh. Vietnam, Asia
*RSL Bus Transport
Bus no.: 767
Classification: "Executive Class" Airconditioned Provincial Operation Bus
Model: Kia Grand Bird SD I
Manufacturer: Kia Motors
Engine: D6AC
Suspension: Air Suspension
(Note: Specification are subjected for verification and may be changed without prior notice.)
Shot Location: San Andres Port, Catanduanes
Aziz Mita, a 70 years aged man, father of two children is working a day labour, where he is carrying mammoth loads of jute to earn his living.
Pabna, Bangladesh, 2021
Jute is known as Golden Fiber in Bangladesh. Once Bangladesh used to earn huge revenue from jute product. Because of its huge contribution in economy as well as because of its golden colour it has claimed the synonym Golden Fiber.
In recent years, Jute has regain its glory as throughout the world jute products are reclaiming its popularity. One of the major reasons is Jute is a environment friendly substance and it is one of the major alternative of plastic based products.
Placing torpedoes in tubes aboard a submarine (National Archives).
No name given for this U-Boat or the location but still an interesting old picture I thought.
A bunch of local log truckers got together to do a charity run for a dying friend. The best part was that Toad got to drive his truck in to town-at the head of the 28 truck convoy!
I'm proud to say that I was a part of it. With the donations from the loads, a free will offering afterwards and a charity auction we raised $28 000 for his family!
From the 1920’s to the 1970’s, the site functioned primarily as
a transfer depot for coal from bulk carriers to smaller coal-fired
vessels. The Balls Head Coal Loader was extremely advanced
for its time, breaking records by delivering nearly 2500 tons of
coal in under 20 hours.
In 1934, the lease was taken up by the Wallarah Coal
Company which had a mine near Newcastle and a wharf on
the coast at Catherine Hill Bay. They would operate the loader
for nearly 40 years.
Work at the Coal Loader fell away until the 1970s when the
place was completely refitted to supply export coal to Japan.
Later the jetty was lengthened to accommodate larger colliers.
By the 1990s technology and social change spelled the end
of operations at the Balls Head Coal Loader. The world had
not lost its appetite for coal – in fact it had never been greater.
But that meant exports directly from Newcastle in ships too
large to dock at Balls Head. The ships took on their final load of coal in 1992.
FEC train 101-19 enters the S Curve north of St. Augustine, Fl on Jan 19, 2018.
© Eric T. Hendrickson 2018 All Rights Reserved
Port of Cuxhaven
_____________________________
© 2014 Andreas Dengs - All rights reserved.
Please contact us if you are interested in one of our images.
_____________________________
Please push "F" key on your keybord to favour this image and "C" key to leave a comment :-)
Thank you!
Andreas's most interesting | recent photos on Flickriver
Lara's most interesting | recent photos on Flickriver
Arriva North West: 1241 (N241 CKA) an East Lancs EL2000 bodied Dennis Dart, painted in standard corporate livery. Captured here loading on the stand in Manchester's Piccadilly Bus Station operating on service 99 to Sale.
© Christopher Lowe.
Date: 22nd October 2007.
Ref No: IMG_1491/JL.
Another one from the Newhaven walk the other day just a few metres from my last shot.
Tried to grab as many shots as possible as the wind really picked up loads and made getting long exposures very hard.
This was a lone boarded up hut which went really well with the dramatic sky.
An exposure of 57 seconds helping to add that wonderful motion in the sky again.
Taken With
â–ºNikon D300s
â–ºNikon 16-85 @16mm
â–ºHitech Pro Stopper
â–ºLee 0.6 ND Grad
â–ºTripod + Cable Release
â–ºBulb Mode
â–ºPre-set White Balance
Press 'L' on your keyboard to view on black