View allAll Photos Tagged NRV
1969 Ford Zodiac auto.
Last MoT test expired in May 2019 (SORN, now MoT exempt).
Seen here for sale @ £1450.
One of the recent acquisitions at Nottingham City Transport is 309 (YX69 NRV) standing inside Trent Bridge garage, 16th June 2020. YX69 NRV is one of a batch of nine new ADL E200, B33F vehicles and was delivered in November 2019. Unlike the first eight vehicles which are branded for routes 5/6/7/8/9 between the City and West Bridgeford YX69 NRV has been finished in a none route livery as a “spare” vehicle. The arrival of these vehicles enabled the withdrawal of the oldest vehicles in public service in the Nottingham City Transport fleet in the form of the last two Optare M920 Solos (fleet numbers 237/38) purchased in August 2001 and the seven Optare Omnitown B33F single deckers (fleet numbers 201 -207) which entered service in March 2004
Je l'ai vu et surtout entendu arriver depuis la place de l'Opéra alors qu'elle était encore à la hauteur de la Madelaine (bon j'en rajoute peut être un peu). J'ai à peine eu le temps de faire quelques réglages et de mettre l'œil sur le viseur que cette "ducati 1098" est passée devant moi ... à une vitesse de fou furieux !
Exif : 17mm - 1/13s à f/13 - ISO 100
Processing : LR2 / PS CS4
F786 NRV - Lothian & Borders Fire Service - Volvo FL6.18 turntable ladder - ex Hampshire Fire Service. Photo by the late Dave Hinde, Edinburgh 4th May 2003
Nottingham City Transport E200MMC 309 passes Mansfield Road whilst carrying a 16 service for Rise Park
Vehicle Details
Operator: Nottingham City Transport
Fleet Details: 309
Registration: YX69 NRV
Vehicle Type: Alexander Dennis Enviro 200 MMC
F986 NRV - Lothian & Borders Fire Service - Volvo FL6.18 turntable ladder - ex Hampshire Fire Service. Photo by the late Dave Hinde in Edinburgh on 2nd May 2004
Seen near the bottom of Mansfield Road, on the very edge of Nottingham city centre, is short Enviro 200 MMC spare 309, with a Brown Line 16 to Rise Park on 15.2.22
Local: Ituiutaba - Aeroclube de Ituiutaba (SNYB)
Modelo: Bombardier Learjet 45
Matrícula: PR-JBS (cn 45-2048)
Operador: Particular
Fabricação: 2006 / Ex: N80169
Bus électrique
Programme expérimental NRW.
Finance : Ministère du travail, de la santé et des affaires sociales. Ministère fédéral de l'intérieur, de la recherche et de la technologie.
En coopération avec GES-MAN - Bosch/Siemens - VARTA - Voith.
F986 NRV - Lothian & Borders Fire Service - Volvo FL6.18 turntable ladder - ex Hampshire Fire Service. Photo by the late Dave Hinde in Edinburgh on 2nd May 2004
This is the third time I've seen 309 and only now have I got it on one of the Bridgford routes, covering for one of its identical (albeit green) siblings. I'm not sure if it's a regular performer on Bridgfords or if, like the other midi spares, it likes to wander.
Now back to its original state without mask on the front, the sole 'pint-sized' E200 spare is seen stopped on Arkwright Street, Nottingham, as it exits the city centre with an 8 to Wilford Hill.
11.10.21
Without tax and MOT for just under a year - which was a real surprise given how dated the house next to it looked. I've been wanting to have a closer look at this for a while as I drive past it most mornings on the way to work, but it's a hellishly difficult road to stop on.
Bus électrique
Programme expérimental NRW.
Finance : Ministère du travail, de la santé et des affaires sociales. Ministère fédéral de l'intérieur, de la recherche et de la technologie
East of England Ambulance Service Vauxhall Astra Response Car, driving along Southend Seafront, Essex
Fleet Number: 676
__________________________________________________
Bus électrique
Programme expérimental NRW.
Finance : Ministère du travail, de la santé et des affaires sociales. Ministère fédéral de l'intérieur, de la recherche et de la technologie
I don't ever remember seeing 309 on a sky blue route before, but as luck would have it I managed to get this photo of it waiting to turn up Woodborough Road, taken out of the window of another bus passing by. There's a bit on interior reflection, but still not a bad photo!
On the subject of reflections, 309's cab window is reflecting a yellow 68 (it took me ages to wrap my head around what it was, and then looked obvious once I'd realised) plus what looks like it might be 905.
23.7.22
(C) Photograph copyright 2009 Ivan Safyan Abrams. All rights reserved.
NRV "Alliance" is a TV star! National Geographic Channel's "Ghost Ships of the Black Sea" documented the underwater archeological expedition led by Dr. Ballard, and has been broadcast worldwide. This ship is featured prominently in the production.
From ScienceDaily (Aug. 16, 2007):
"Using a novel underwater robot, University of Delaware marine scientists will help reveal the mysteries of the Black Sea's geology and maritime history, including ages-old shipwrecks, during an international expedition that is now underway.
The Institute for Exploration and the Institute for Archaeological Oceanography at the University of Rhode Island's Graduate School of Oceanography are leading the mission, which will conduct geological and archaeological research in the Aegean and Black Seas--waterways that have served as major trade routes for centuries.
Robert Ballard, professor of oceanography at the University of Rhode Island, and president of the Institute for Exploration, is the principal investigator on the research cruise, which will include a multidisciplinary team of scientists from several nations.
“This is a truly exciting expedition that will shed light on important geological features in the Mediterranean while also uncovering vital information about ancient trade routes and the maritime history of the Black Sea,” Ballard said.
Perhaps best known for locating the sunken ocean liner Titanic in 1985, Ballard has received numerous honors for scientific research and public education. He was awarded an honorary doctor of science degree by UD in 2001.
Last year, in partnership with the Department of Underwater Heritage in Ukraine, Ballard's research team located numerous shipwrecks in the Black Sea, including a vessel from the Byzantine period that will be revisited and explored during this expedition.
The research vessel NRV Alliance will serve as the scientists' home, lab and the platform from which remotely operated vehicles with high-definition cameras will be deployed to provide high-resolution images of the deep.
From the Ukrainian research vessel Flamingo, Art Trembanis, UD assistant professor of marine and Earth studies, and graduate students Adam Skarke and Stephanie Nebel, together with colleagues from the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping at the University of New Hampshire and Ballard's own team, will operate the autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) DOERRI (pronounced “Dory”), which stands for “Delaware Oceanographic and Environmental Research Remote Instrument.”
“My students and I are tremendously honored to be participating in this unprecedented project,” Trembanis said. “We are working with a real pioneer in the field of ocean exploration--a hero and mentor to an entire generation of marine scientists, myself included,” he noted.
The 83-inch-long, 240-pound DOERRI, which Trembanis designed, will map the seafloor of the Black Sea off Sevastopol, Ukraine, on missions up to 14 hours long and to depths of approximately 200 meters (656 feet).
“As a child, I remember waking up early on Saturday mornings not to watch cartoons, but to catch the latest National Geographic Explorer episode that Dr. Ballard might be hosting, and now I find myself fulfilling a childhood dream to work alongside Dr. Ballard and his expert team of researchers. It is truly exciting,” Trembanis said.
The DOERRI carries a sophisticated sensor system including devices to measure salinity, temperature and oxygen levels and two types of advanced sonar systems for mapping the seafloor. Multiple computers and safety features work in tandem to keep the systems operating, and to safely return the vehicle back to the ship at the end of each day.
In many ways, DOERRI may serve as the scientists' “agent into the unknown” much like the AUV's namesake, the cartoon fish “Dory,” did in the Disney film Finding Nemo.
“Just like her eponymous namesake, we hope that DOERRI will be a finder of lost things,” Trembanis said. “We hope DOERRI will provide unrivaled data that will allow us to discover very ancient shipwrecks, previously unknown, on the Black Sea floor,” he noted. “Along the way, DOERRI will also give us new insights into the dynamics of dissolved oxygen and internal waves that help to shape and mold the seafloor.”
Shipwrecks in the Black Sea often are remarkably well-preserved due to the waterway's chemistry. Nearly 90 percent of the Black Sea is a no-oxygen “dead zone,” where only a few bacteria live.
“At depths beyond 150 meters, the Black Sea is not unlike a giant natural bell jar from which life-supporting oxygen has been entirely removed,” Trembanis said.
A major advantage of AUVs like DOERRI, Trembanis said, is that they allow researchers to literally become more immersed in the marine environment.
“By severing the cord to the surface, we become more a part of the environment we are studying because we can approach things just as a curious fish might do,” Trembanis said. “In real terms, the AUV provides capabilities to get below the influence of surface conditions and get closer to the features on the seafloor we wish to study without actually touching or disturbing anything around us. Furthermore, we can ask the robot to do critical but perhaps monotonous tasks over and over again--tasks that give us great scientific data, but tasks that would seem boring to human operators.”
Locally, DOERRI has been used in a variety of research in Delaware's coastal waters, including nearshore areas of Delaware Bay and the Atlantic Ocean and in Delaware's Inland Bays.
While this will be the DOERRI's farthest trip from home so far, it likely will not be its last. Trembanis said the leading-edge robot already is scheduled for another international mission, to explore the coral reefs off Bonaire, early next year.
The expedition is supported by NOAA's Office of Ocean Exploration, the Office of Naval Research and the Richard Lounsbery Foundation. Participating institutions include the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea, University of Texas, Institute for Classical Archaeology, Naval Meteorological and Oceanography Command, University of Delaware, University of Massachusetts at Boston, University of New Hampshire and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution."
and, from NATO's website:
"The NATO Research Vessel ALLIANCE is one of the most capable undersea research platforms at sea today and possibly the most quietest motor vessel afloat. She is unique in being one of only two ships owned jointly by member nations of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. NRV ALLIANCE has the status of a public vessel of the Federal Republic of Germany and flies the German republic flag. The vessel is assigned to the NATO Undersea Research Centre under the Allied Command Transformation, located at La Spezia, Italy.
ALLIANCE enables scientists from the Centre to conduct a wide range of experiments in all the oceans of importance to NATO. Particular care has been taken to minimise the noise generated by the ship in order to reduce interference with the environmental measurements and acoustic experiments which form an important basis for Centre research. The vessel has been designed for eight different noise states, the quietest one operating on batteries. An auxiliary gas turbine generator provides the lowest noise propulsion option, leading up to the full complement of diesel electric generators allowing the vessel to tow twenty tonnes at twelve knots. The gas turbine and diesel electric generators are mounted on individual vibration isolating rafts and enclosed within acoustic booths to reduce hull and airborne noise transmission.
ALLIANCE has 400 m² of open deck working area as well as 370 m² of enclosed laboratory spaces. There is an additional 500 m³ of scientific storage. The vessel is equipped with an extensive suite of winches and other deck handling gear for deploying and towing systems and instrumentation needed for acoustic and oceanographic research. A sophisticated Windows based integrated navigation system, which utilizes DGPS, includes the ARCS (electronic chart system) and ensures that the ship's position is logged with great precision to provide precise time tagged navigation strings to other fixed vessel sensors such as the Swathe Mapping System and the Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler.
ALLIANCE is operated by a commercial ship manager. When not engaged in NATO research, the vessel is available for charter to NATO nations and international organisations with NATO nation membership."
This store was only a Kmart for about a decade, opening in 1981 or '82. it was replaced by a location in nearby Christiansburg in 1991. It's currently leased by Virginia Tech for Printing Services and storage of surplus property .
F991 NRV - Hampshire Fire Service. Volvo FL6.14/HCB Angus water tender ladder. Ardingley Vintage Vehicle Show on 13th July 2008
F986 NRV - Hampshire Fire Service - Volvo FL6.18 turntable ladder - later to Lothian & Borders Fire Service and exported 2011. Southampton on 31st July 1994
Until now I'd refrained from claiming that I'd seen *all* of NCT's single deck types on the 15/16/87/88 spare-fest, because I hadn't seen a small MMC get used, but now I can bring you 309 being pressed into use to cover a purple board, seen arriving into the city centre down Mansfield Road. It probably isn't helping crowding issues on the 87/88 when it's smaller than a normal E200!
Behind the shorter-than-usual E200 is a longer-than-usual E200, numbered 80 above, as 389 follows with a 16 and provides the spare E200 combo-shot I never knew I wanted until it happened here. Now to try and get them again but with one of the standard length E200 spares in between!
On the subject of random branding anomalies, none of the E200 MMCs ever got the ticket price and frequency/wifi lettering at the top of the windscreen.
Mansfield Road, Nottingham, 9.2.22