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A part of a small project done for a friend who's doing an essay on culinary outdoors and stuff

YAY! Another fun item Primus and I have put together for the Love and War 30L gacha event! Coming out soon so check out a 30L subscriber to keep up to date with all their stuff! **Can be worn with SLINK Fist hands!**

Flt Lt Ollie Suckling piloting an RAF Tornado GR4 for the last time in LFA7.

Tattoo Primus is out now at TMD and at Ethos!

 

☠︎︎༒︎✞︎ ⚡ "Sharp minds cut deep, and the truth's always got an edge." - Nas ⚔️

 

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Ethos/124/133/501

florus [Explored #149 - 25/04/2013]

Leidolf Lordox Primus

with Leidolf Triplon 2.8/50

in Prontor-SVS-Shutter

 

A pretty rangefinder camera with fixed lens. It was introduced in 1957, so it is sometimes called "Lordox 57" to divide it from earlier Lordox cameras, which Leidolf produced from 1950 to 1952. This Lordox 57 and the former ones are quite different, this camera here is clearly based on the Leidolf Lordomat from 1954. The main difference is the fixed lens on the Lordox, while the Lordomat has interchangeable lenses. So, the Lordox was thought for beginners, and actually there are three more or less equipped variants to make it more affordable:

 

"Lordox Baby": Viewfinder with Pronto shutter

"Lordox Junior": Viewfinder with Prontor-SVS shutter

"Lordox Primus": Rangefinder with Prontor-SVS shutter

 

All Lordox have that 2.8/50 Triplon, obviously a three-element lens, and in case of the Primus it is really a pity. With the rangefinder it certainly has deserved a better lens. The Primus inherited the rangefinder assembly from the Lordomat with interchangeable lenses, that's the reason why it has that huge behind-the-lens shutter. Baby and Junior have a common leaf shutter in the diaphragm plane.

olympus OM , kodak film

Model No. 96L

 

My original Primus stove shown here with its original, if somewhat battered, cardboard box and 1.3 litre MSR Quick Solo Pot.

 

Being made mainly of brass, the Primus stove was heavy and cumbersome compared to today’s portable LPG stoves, but it was fun to use. Starting it up was a bit of a ritual if all you wanted was to boil some water for a cup of coffee, but there was the joy of pouring a small amount of methylated spirit into the spirit cup to prime it, lighting the meth then watching and waiting for it to almost burn away before pressurising the tank with the built-in pump. This caused the paraffin to rise through a preheating and vaporising tube before being forced under pressure to the actual burner where it would mix with air and then ignite into a very hot and powerful blue flame. The flame’s intensity is adjusted by pumping more air into the tank to make it larger, or releasing air by means of a small air screw located on the filler cap to make it smaller (e.g. when simmering). It all sounds very complicated compared to modern LPG stoves, which you simply turn on and light, but it was one of those things that contributed to the joy of camping.

 

My Primus stove always brought back memories of when I was a child during the 1950s, camping with my parents at Humberston near Cleethorpes. In those days, it seemed everyone cooked on a traditional Primus stove when camping, and intermingled with the pervading aroma of breakfasts cooking all across the campsite was the occasional whiff of methylated spirit and burning paraffin from someone just starting up their stove. I still keep my old Primus out of pure nostalgia, but it has recently been replaced with a LPG stove.

 

Primus Stove

Developed in 1892 by Frans Wilhelm Lindqvist and Johan Viktor Svenson, the Primus stove was the world’s first portable pressurized-burner paraffin stove and was made in Stockholm, Sweden. The first units were sold mainly to women who operated street market shops in Stockholm, but the stove’s reputation for efficiency and reliability soon earned it its place in the history books when famed and intrepid explorers chose it to take on their expeditions.

 

It was the stove of choice for these spirited adventurers:

* Fridtjof Nansen's 1893 unsuccessful North Pole attempt.

* Salomon August Andrée’s 1897 North Pole expedition.

* Roald Amundsen’s expedition to the South Pole in 1911.

* George Mallory's ill-fated expedition to Mount Everest in 1924.

* First successful ascent of Mount Everest by Sir Edmund Hillary and

` Tenzing Norgay in 1953.

 

And then there was me!

Also known as 'The Priest', Primus Hecate deals with divine power to bless the Legion and bestow curse to the enemies. He may not be a fighter but he is as familiar to battle as any other great general and his role in the legion is indispensable.

Westside Community Tulip Festival

Primus PD2L Traktor - Baujahr 1956

 

Voigtlaender_MacroApoLantharE_65F2_07

So, I just got this back from Brickfair.

 

Anyways, I was inspired by Cole Blaq's Lego Graf. Style.

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With the winter sun setting in the west, Tornado GR4 ZA553 '045' as Primus 1 is already airborne while ZA560 'EB-Q' as 'Primus 2' plays catchup. RAF Marham 25 January 2018

7. Oldtimertreffen am 07.07.2012 in Greußen - Ausfahrt zahlreicher Teilnehmer nach Bad Tennstedt, hier ein Adler Primus 1,7A von 1934.

 

Der Adler Primus, ein PKW mit Hinterradantrieb der Adlerwerke in Frankfurt am Main, kam 1932 auf den Markt. Er war das Schwestermodell des frontgetriebenen Trumpf, für den dieselben wassergekühlten Vierzylinder-Reihenmotoren mit 1,5 bzw. 1,7 Litern Hubraum verwendet wurden. Für die klassische Konstruktion zeichnete Otto Göckeritz verantwortlich.

 

The Adler Primus is a small family car introduced by the Frankfurt based auto-maker, Adler in March 1932. In a move reminiscent of British Leyland in the 1970s, Adler launched two similarly sized cars in the same year, one of which followed the then new trend set by DKW for front-wheel drive, and one respecting the conventional rear-wheel drive configuration still used by the market leader, Opel.

 

The Primus was the first of the smaller Adlers to be introduced, early in 1932, and was the rear wheel drive offering. The conservative design was the responsibility of Otto Göckeritz, the man who had designed the company's first small car back in 1906. The 1932 Primus was effectively a scaled down version of the manufacturer’s Standard 6 of 1927, applying the same high bodied design with a simple “overslung” chassis on which the car's rigid axles fitted underneath the principal loadbearing lengths of the chassis.

"Primus" por Santi Pozzi

 

Serigrafia a 3 tintas

61 x 44cm

Papel Ilustracion mate 300 grs

Edicion de 160

 

Impreso en Imprenta Chimango

Constructed in 1939, 339 Pitt Street is an Art Deco building that once served as the offices of the Sydney Metropolitan Water Sewerage and Drainage (M.W.S.& D.) Board.

 

Woods Bagot’s adaptive reuse of the building highlights and restores heritage features while repurposing the space as a contemporary design hotel, with rooftop restaurant, bar and pool.

 

Converted from empty office space, hotel rooms over six floors feature luxurious interiors, creating an authentic, sophisticated and engaging experience for guests. Heritage features of the site, such as original marble columns, are celebrated while complementary finishes and materials have been added to create an elegant modern feel.

 

Location: Sydney, Australia

Address: 339 Pitt Street

 

Source: Primus Website

Se recomienda ver en la caja oscura ( Pulsa "L" )

 

See recommended in black box ( push "l" )

 

Copyright © – Fernando Romero Santos ©.

The reproduction, publication, modification, transmission or exploitation of any work

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without my prior written permission is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved."

 

If interested, please contact with author by private e_mail: frs.fotografo@gmail.com

If you're going to use any of my photo's, please let me know.

Tribute to Kings, Rush and Primus music. Les Claypool is as awesome and powerful as ever!

Tribute to Kings, Rush and Primus music. Les Claypool is as awesome and powerful as ever!

The Bass Master himself, Les Claypool, throwing down with Primus.

 

Hit the post on www.ishootshows.com for the full image set and shooting notes:

 

Photos: Primus @ The Pageant

 

Connect:

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A part of a small project done for a friend who's doing an essay on culinary outdoors and stuff

Archives box.

 

Picture of my father with friends in the 70's.

Best pass along Thirlmere I have ever seen

Christ Primus C150 at Morrisons tonight. Thought I would get some photographs of the system at night quite spooky, but I also find it annoying. They haven’t installed wash bay lighting like they have at other locations. You would think they would fix the lights already in the bay.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Optimus Primus 71L...

Primus was a Swedish manufacturer of camp stoves. The rights to their product line were bought up by competitor Optimus, which went on to produce stove under the Primus trademark. Has nothing to do with Transformers.

One of the few shots where Les was in the shadows. I love how he pulled out the classic Rickenbacker bass when Primus performed Rush's, "A Farewell to Kings" in its entirety.

 

Una de las pocas tomas en las cuales Les no está en las sombras. Me gusta mucho que sacara el bajo Rickenbacker clásico cuando Primus tocó en su totalidad el disco de Rush, "A Farewell to Kings."

It was obvious that when Primus planned this show, the visual experience was just as important as the aural experience, but most of the show found the members of the band in very low light or dark shadows. I like seeing performers when they play but I don't plan their shows. So many of the shots were taken in very low light with high ISO which meant I had to use high levels of noise removal in post processing to make the images presentable. I still had a blast at the show though. And isn't that just a beautiful bass?

 

Fue obvio que cuando Primus planeó este espectáculo, la experiencia visual era tan importante como la experiencia auditiva. Entonces, durante la mayor parte del espectáculo los integrantes de la banda se encontraban en muy poca luz o sombras oscuras. Me gusta ver a los artistas cuando tocan, pero no planeo sus conciertos. Muchas de las tomas se tomaron con muy poca luz y un ISO alto, lo que significa que tuve que usar altos niveles de eliminación de ruido en el procesamiento posterior para que las imágenes fueran presentables. Sin embargo, todavía me divertí mucho en el espectáculo. Y, ¿no es muy bello el bajo?

ZA554, RAF 100 tail, flying as Primus 02, lands as the bases sorties finish for the day

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