View allAll Photos Tagged MetalDetector
Out with my metal detector today. I found (in an hour) 23 pennies, six dimes, one quarter, one fake Spanish (?) coin, and a 14k gold men's wedding band!
My 1,200th photo posted to Flickr.
Israeli soldiers will not miss any opportunity to make Palestinian life harder. On this photo you can see Givati soldier who checks medical documents of elder Palestinian lady He knows her well because she cross this checkpoint at least twice a day, he knows that she is sick and she can't pass metal detector... still he acts like a real... "hero" and ask her for documents. Just to stop her for at least 15 minutes (sometimes couple of times more) to make her life even harder that it already is. Official reason - security measures.
Place: Checkpoint 56 (Shuhada St. entrance), Hebron, Palestine.
Just come prepared with a positive attitude and shoes that can be slipped off. Then all will be fine.
U.S. FIFTH FLEET AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY (April 2, 2014) U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Brad Wineholt, Combat Logistics Battalion 22, 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), explosive ordnance disposal technician of Hanover, Penn., searches for an improvised explosive device during a training exercise. The 22nd MEU is deployed with the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group as a theater reserve and crisis response force throughout U.S. Central Command and the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility.(U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Caleb McDonald/Released)
Forensic Specialists and Firearms Examiners with the Montgomery County Police Department hone their skills by training with metal detectors. (more information)
The sound of a dozen metal detectors sounds like a cross between really happy geese and really angry infants.
I was asked to design a cake for a metal detector enthusiast!
I added a bespoke, personalised fondant figure of the birthday boy!
All hand modelled from fondant icing, 100% edible.
Check out my Blog at www.cakes-by-jacques.blogspot.com
Click here to see this image in cross-view format (or anaglyph or wiggle)
[alternative formats courtesy of schillr]
[visit my blog to find out more about creating and viewing 3D images]
A metal detectorist filters away soil from a prospective find. Is it maybe an Iron Age gold coin - or a fragment of wire?
This is 'The Fly', a miniatue phone I picked up on ebay for £20. It's shorter and narrower than my middle finger, and really has to be seen to be believed. it's a full-spec phone that does all the usual calls and text messages, plus for some bizarre reason it has a voice-changer built in.
The X-Ray on the right (with an AA battery for scale) shows that there isn't much inside it - in fact, one of its claims to fame, apart from its size, is that it is hard to find using metal detectors. For some reason those two factors make it a popular item to smuggle into prisons...
Battery life is 2-3 days and it uses a slightly longer than normal micro USB to charge. SIM is a regular micro card. It's GSM only, so won't work on Three. I popped an EE card in and it worked fine.
When my late-teens kids saw it they decided it was a must-have accessory with which to impress their friends. I haven't seen it since!
A uniformed member of the United States Secret Service stands guard at the security checkpoint to enter the Gateway Arch grounds in Downtown St. Louis, where Barack Obama was to later give a speech. Transportation Security Administration officials in the background check "carry-on" items as attendees pass through metal detectors.
al matammah, sudan, africa
early 1976
searching for historic artifacts in the bayuda desert
near the site of the battle of abu klea
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
al matammah, sudan, africa
early 1976
searching for historic artifacts in the bayuda desert
near the site of the battle of abu klea
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
sudan, africa
early 1976
garret schenck
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
Today is National Garage Sale Day and it looks like Han and Chewbacca have found something very interesting!
Enjoy!
This is an Alternative Version for one of my daily shots of 365 Days of Clones.
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Next time I go to Waikiki, I hope to get some metal slugs and sprinkle them in the sand in the morning and take video of these guys in the afternoon,
A metal detector is used to carefully scan the skull area of a grave.
The early Saxon cemetery at Collingbourne Ducis is the largest in Wiltshire. 78 inhumation graves and 4 cremation burials were excavated. To find out more about the site visit
www.wessexarch.co.uk/projects/county/wiltshire/collingbou...
al matammah, sudan, africa
early 1976
searching for historic artifacts in the bayuda desert
near the site of the battle of abu klea
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
I mortified a Nautilus DMC II-Ba Metal Detector and made it a Steampunk Metal Detector!
I added a meter circuit and a Metrotech Meter along with a self contained stereo audio output amplifiers and two stereo speakers. I needed two amplifiers and separate speakers because the Nautilis Metal Detector operates with two separate detection circuits simultaneously! I also needed amplifiers because the Nautilus uses headphones.
Eid is a time for joy, a time for togetherness, a time to remember God’s blessings.
Celebrate this Eid with safety and spread peace.
Eid Mubarak
be SAFE be DIGITALS
Digitals India Security Products Pvt. Ltd.
Families and couples and swimmers and metal detectorists and dog walkers on Frinton beach on the first day of 2022.
Early morning Archaeologists (?) lurking about in a field near Margaretting in Essex (UK).
Photograph by David and taken on his travels which I have permission to post to Flickr with thanks.
A photo for a Friday! Our TN77 #MetalDetector in action in an aggregate quarry detecting tramp iron & manganese steel (digger teeth) to protect crushers, screens & conveyors
Find out more on www.mastermagnets.com/product/tn77-conveyor-belt-metal-de...