View allAll Photos Tagged Probe
Originally meant to be a Mustang, Ford decided to sell its front-wheel drive car developed with its Japanese partner Mazda as a separate model. They must have figured out that no one would accept a front-wheel drive car with Japanese parts as a Mustang, no matter how hot it looked or ran.
This is the second-generation Ford Probe, in production from 1993 to 1997. The base engine was a two-liter inline four, but a 2.5-liter V-6 was also available. It shared parts with the Mazda MX-6 coupe; both were built in Flat Rock, Michigan.
Zvex Fuzz Probe, got my the Vexter series because I'm a raging hobo (and I couldn't find many in the UK... ooh also I wanted the LED to tell if it's turned on and the funny port for the PSA 230es adaptor).
Squeally squeals and such. Don't think I'm going to have any built in fuzz factory guitars... just doesn't make sense man... just doesn't make sense.
But yeah, can play Plug in baby and a host of other fuzz related tunes. Pick up a bag today
Random little blue probe thingie. It started out trying to be a microscale ship, but in the end I think it looks more like an unmanned probe. It was the first MOC I built at my new place.
It hasn’t made it into the popular news channels much which is puzzling because the device, and its mission, is so very, very cool. On August 12, 2018, NASA will launch the Parker Solar Probe, a car-sized spacecraft with a mission to examine the Sun’s corona. It’s no small feat and will require the probe maintain speeds of 430,000 miles per hour as it whirls around the sun.
reekoscience.com/science-news/space/nasa-parker-solar-pro...
Edited image from Los Alamos National Laboratory of a laser probe - not something you want to see at your next doctor visit.
Original caption: This specialized laser instrument allows Los Alamos scientists to perform sophisticated nuclear experiments and gather significant amounts of data without a critical mass of plutonium. The data is used to help validate the extremely complex computer codes that reside on the laboratory’s world class supercomputers. These codes along with thousands of experiments conducted across the laboratory allow Laboratory staff and ultimately the Director to assess the state and health of the Nation’s nuclear deterrent and report those findings ultimately to the President of the United States.