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For a long period of time I've been struggling to find proper storage for my plugs. At last while thrifting I found a little trinket shelf that would work perfectly.
A little bit of TLC and some paint goes a long way!
<3
The Daily Shoot #448: Power plugs are ubiquitous. Can you make a creative photo of such a common thing? Try it today!
12/50: Project 50/50
estos me los pidió un cabro de mi casa pa pasar piola en la pega :) ,,, igual tiene restos de pasta pa pulir y un poco de polvo,, es q no tuve tiempo pa limpiarlos por ke se los llevo altoke , me dijo: wom yo los lavo,,, apuesto ke se le kaen por el lavamanos :/
Old style plug socket in Neasden Underground Bunker.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddock_(war_rooms)
Daily Shoot Assignment 448
"Power plugs are ubiquitous. Can you make a creative photo of such a common thing? Try it today!"
Just a good old power plug for some of my Apple bits and bobs!
Flickr Lounge ~ Weekend Theme (Week 18) ~ Minimalism ...
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Grand old pub building most recently called Plug apparently, though The Plough originally, now closed of course.
Address: 90 Stockwell Road.
Owner: Truman Hanbury Buxton (former).
Links:
Ah a drain plug....who needs one of these? When I told Poof it was my middle of the night/don't want to get out in the cold pee hole she nearly killed me.
The official use is to drain the future 'shower in a box' Poof is currently working on and modeled after the one MsNomer created.
Then there is the morality and 'codes' about dumping grey water on the ground.
Also in the future is a grey water catchment system for the times when (boondocking at Wallyworld or Cracker Barrel) when dumping shower water on the ground would be problematic.
We've found in the last 23 trips that showers are often very very easy to come by. The shower-n-box will be not often used but nice to know it is there when wanted.
I used "Rescue Tape" available from www.rescuetape.com to fashion a new plug replacement. It only took about three inches to make the cover. It's stretchy, sticks only to itself, and is easy to work with.
On Harley engines, you have to pull a timing plug out to see the timng marks on the flywheel. If you try and run the engine this way to time it, oil flies out everywhere making a big mess. So instead you thread in this clear plastic plug and sight through it at the timing marks.
Damn rotaries and their expensive consumables. Regular plugs for piston engines cost me $7 a pop, these ones were $19.50 each even with valued customer discount.