View allAll Photos Tagged PowerLine
Pentax K1000 with expired Kodak Gold 400 at Cardwell Hill Trail near Corvallis Oregon. Digitally retouched with Apple Photos since I'm still learning how to do film photography.
Tonight my wife was having a Karaoke party for her girlfriends at our home. I escaped to the moors!!!
This photo is taken at Hellisheidi moor east of ReykjavÃk where huge geothermal poweplant is under construction.
On this photo we can see two different powerlines. One in the air which moves power from the hydropowerplants 150km east of ReykjavÃk. The pipelines moves steam to the new nearby geothermal powerplant.
In west we can see the sunset around midnight north of ReykjavÃk.
These lines come right out of the powerplant in Colstrip. Just thought it was a cool shot right at sunset.
View of the pi-shaped power poles along Discovery Road. Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), Batavia, IL.
These run from east to west all the way across the state. They run into Texas, turn north, come back through LA and go up to Arkansas
Part of the local power transmission lines as they cross the Endor Trail Greeway here in Sanford, NC.
This line lost about 30 poles after Hurricane Lili, most of which were rebuilt by Mississippi Power crews that were helping.
This is what was being built here on this day....
www.flickr.com/photos/81578389@N00/7166308902/in/photostream
643_Powerline_ Bonneville Power Administration. Caribou-Targhee National Forest. Credit: US Forest Service.
Camera: Hasselblad 500C/M, Planar 100/3,5 T*, polarizing filter. Film: Kodak Ektachrome 100 Plus EPP (exp. 08/2010), home-developed with the Tetenal E-6 3-bath kit.
I was looking around photos from last year and found this one from Houston, Texas with a cool urban feeling. The majestic skyline behind and the nest of powerlines coming in from all different directions.
Press L for Large, press F for Favourite.
Crews inspecting powerlines on the Central Coast as part of routine maintenance. Our network includes almost 50,000km of below and above-ground electricity cables.
Very old and weak design. These run for about 30 miles and every single pole has two smaller ones braced at the base.