View allAll Photos Tagged Machining
Otra maquina mas que te encuentras paseando por el campo, olvidada, sin uso, alli nos fuimos mi Compañero Daniel, Joaquin y yo a jugar un poco con las linternas
A machine designed to harvet potatoes. The horse pulled the machine along which engage years to set the spinner going. The tines of the dinner sent potatoes from the soil into the net that stopped the potatoes flying. They were then picked up, usually by women or children, who put them into sacks for market or the store shed of the farm for saving as seed potatoes. This example was later adapted for use with a tractor. Drawn with a Rotring 0.18 Rapidograph pen.
Looks like the machine was used to move large logs back when logging was in its heyday. This is the radiator on the front. Found it near the road in Ashford, WA. Just outside of Mt. Rainier National Park.
Nothing else as the 'peak' of a joystick from an old machine against a white (and photoshop cleaned) wall.
York Street, Broadstairs, U.K.
It's so long since I saw one of these I had forgotten about them. Now I remember it was quite a pleasing experience to use one - the sound of the strip of stamps being fed out of the slot when you lifted the flap marked 'LIFT", and the crisp way your purchased stamps would tear off at the perforations. Quite often, the effectiveness of the perforations was deficient, and you would lose a corner of your last stamp to the benefit of the next purchaser. These machines were very convenient, being available when post offices were closed, and with the cost of stamps being around a half penny to tuppence they could be bought with the available coinage. Now, a stamp will cost you 64p (eqivalent to 153 old pennies btw) so you can see why stamp machines died out.
My first build for the Summer Joust competition, category Castle Interiors. I know I've built the pit of despair before, but this time I built the machine and did it all more accurately. This is also an entry for MAYnifigure 2016, enjoy!
Since in lockdown mode at my house I have decided to shoot couple still-life pictures of my old 1950’s Coke Machine at my house. I used a Fujifilm XH1 with 18x55mm in Velvia Vivid film simulation. I inherited the machine from my Dad who work for the Coca-Cola Company for 27 years.
After they get off the commuter train on time and get out of the Tokyo Metro station there is an atrium where the high-speed elevators deliver employees to their offices within thirty seconds. They don’t waste even one minute. Everything in their society including themselves is controlled by the machines they made.
Taken in Nakano-Sakaue Sunbright Twin
Nakano-sakaue Station, Tokyo.
© Graeme Webb 2011. All rights reserved.
Another old typewriter. This pre-dates even me, and is a marvellous piece of machinery. As I sit here typing away on my itty bitty wireless keyboard, I feel somewhat disconnected from the process which is taking place. With these old machines, we were very much a part of the process and it felt right somehow.
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