View allAll Photos Tagged Probe
The air to air refuelling probe seen here on an RAF C-130K Hercules. The aircraft now retired, is on display at the RAF Museum at Cosford - so won't be needing a fuel top up any time soon!
Canon 50D
Manufactured in the early 90s, and discovered still on the shelves of an ACE Hardware in 2004! It had been there for so long that it was not even in their systems when I took it to be rung up.
Estes has recently re-released this one, so it will be getting a repaint with new decals soon.
18mm
Flights: 4
Last Flown: 2006
Trinity invited all curious minds to journey through the best that Irish research has to offer as this year’s offering of PROBE – an intimate, engaging, and interactive pop-up festival – which took centre stage in Trinity on Friday September 27.
PROBE: Research Uncovered at Trinity College Dublin is a free showcase of the diverse range of academic research taking place, which aims to engage and involve the public with over 50 live experiments, exclusive demonstrations, laboratory and observatory tours and interactive workshops.
Photo Chris Bellew /Fennell Photography Copyright 2019
Dock with the Space Station - this is the probe-and-cone that connects Soyuz to ISS. See how it works? Credit: Chris Hadfield
Once the stock is mounted into the VMC, a probe is used to 'locate' it for machining.
VMC means vertical machining center, which is a type of modern CNC milling machine. This one is a Tormach PCNC 1100.
Spotted over Wichita.
Our radio went dead.
Our... most private places were probed.
We were given technology that could save the earth. Alien technology. Unlike anything any of us had ever seen.
The aliens gave us:
THE FLOWBEE.
... or, maybe this is just a corroding shower head.
Trinity invited all curious minds to journey through the best that Irish research has to offer as this year’s offering of PROBE – an intimate, engaging, and interactive pop-up festival – which took centre stage in Trinity on Friday September 27.
PROBE: Research Uncovered at Trinity College Dublin is a free showcase of the diverse range of academic research taking place, which aims to engage and involve the public with over 50 live experiments, exclusive demonstrations, laboratory and observatory tours and interactive workshops.
Photo Chris Bellew /Fennell Photography Copyright 2019
Fully-functional backup for the Pioneer 10 and 11 space probes, which were the first craft to enter the outer solar system, visit Jupiter and Saturn, and eventually leave the solar system entirely.
Trinity invited all curious minds to journey through the best that Irish research has to offer as this year’s offering of PROBE – an intimate, engaging, and interactive pop-up festival – which took centre stage in Trinity on Friday September 27.
PROBE: Research Uncovered at Trinity College Dublin is a free showcase of the diverse range of academic research taking place, which aims to engage and involve the public with over 50 live experiments, exclusive demonstrations, laboratory and observatory tours and interactive workshops.
Photo Chris Bellew /Fennell Photography Copyright 2019
Trinity invited all curious minds to journey through the best that Irish research has to offer as this year’s offering of PROBE – an intimate, engaging, and interactive pop-up festival – which took centre stage in Trinity on Friday September 27.
PROBE: Research Uncovered at Trinity College Dublin is a free showcase of the diverse range of academic research taking place, which aims to engage and involve the public with over 50 live experiments, exclusive demonstrations, laboratory and observatory tours and interactive workshops.
Photo Chris Bellew /Fennell Photography Copyright 2019
Trinity invited all curious minds to journey through the best that Irish research has to offer as this year’s offering of PROBE – an intimate, engaging, and interactive pop-up festival – which took centre stage in Trinity on Friday September 27.
PROBE: Research Uncovered at Trinity College Dublin is a free showcase of the diverse range of academic research taking place, which aims to engage and involve the public with over 50 live experiments, exclusive demonstrations, laboratory and observatory tours and interactive workshops.
Photo Chris Bellew /Fennell Photography Copyright 2019
Secret Order Of Lost Memories
you can see the complete presentation of the project here:
www.behance.net/gallery/Secret-Order-of-Lost-Memories/271...
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.
Trinity invited all curious minds to journey through the best that Irish research has to offer as this year’s offering of PROBE – an intimate, engaging, and interactive pop-up festival – which took centre stage in Trinity on Friday September 27.
PROBE: Research Uncovered at Trinity College Dublin is a free showcase of the diverse range of academic research taking place, which aims to engage and involve the public with over 50 live experiments, exclusive demonstrations, laboratory and observatory tours and interactive workshops.
Photo Chris Bellew /Fennell Photography Copyright 2019