View allAll Photos Tagged Propeller

Achieved around 70 kmph in 1906.

Italian Airforce Museum, Bracciano.

 

Seletar Airbase, Singapore. Propeller of a parked jet.

Image taken 20.01.2019 by David Moth

I've taken a lot of picture of hydrangea. So I decided to upload 6 pictures of them.

 

アジサイの写真をたくさん撮ったので、今日は6枚アップロードしちゃいます。

 

Canon EOS 7D + Canon EF 100mm F2.8L Macro IS USM

"Danger Jet Intake"

 

North American Aviation FJ-3 Fury

 

North American Aviation, builder of the famed P-51 Mustang propeller-driven fighter aircraft, built the Navy’s first jet aircraft, the XFJ-1 Fury. It conducted carrier trials on Intrepid’s sister ship the USS Boxer in 1948. The Air Force ordered a modified swept-wing version of the Fury that became famous in the skies above Korea as the F-86 Sabre.

 

After the success of Sabres, the Navy ordered a carrier-based version of the F-86, the FJ-2, that incorporated an arrestor hook and reinforced landing gear for carrier landings, folding wings for easier storage, and four 20mm cannon. This new aircraft was superseded by the purpose-built FJ-3. By 1956–57, the FJ-3 was flown by twenty-one carrier-based fighter squadrons – including one assigned to the Intrepid. With the last Fury delivered in 1958, more than 11,000 Fury of all types had been built.

 

The FJ-3 Fury displayed on the hangar deck is painted in the colors of squadron VF-33, which flew from the Intrepid in 1958.

I got the propellers (GWS 3-Blade 7x3.5) from R/C Dude Hobbies mounted.

Propeller and part of a compass is intended to remind us of those who died serving in the Navy.

At least, I presume it's a ships propeller - certainly it was near a harbour, and looked to be large enough to belong to a ship.

B-25 Mitchell propeller and engine detail.

 

This collection of Cassini images provides context for understanding the

location and scale of propeller-shaped features observed within Saturn's A

ring.

  

Careful analysis of the highest resolution images taken by Cassini's

cameras as the spacecraft slipped into Saturn orbit revealed the four

faint, propeller-shaped double-streaks in an otherwise bland part of the

mid-A ring. Imaging scientists believe the "propellers" provide the first

direct observation of the dynamical effects of moonlets approximately 100

meters (300 feet) in diameter. The propeller moonlets represent a hitherto

unseen size-class of particles orbiting within the rings.

  

The left-hand panel provides broad context within the rings, and shows the

B ring, Cassini Division, A ring and F ring. Image scale in the radial, or

outward from Saturn, direction is about 45 kilometers (28 miles) per

pixel; because the rings are viewed at an angle, the image scale in the

longitudinal, or circumferential, direction is several times greater.

  

The center image is a closer view of the A ring, showing the radial

locations where propeller features were spotted. The view is approximately

1,800 kilometers (1,100 miles) across from top to bottom and includes a

large density wave at bottom (caused by the moons Janus and Epimetheus),

as well as two smaller density waves. The footprints of the propeller

discovery images are between density waves, in bland, quiescent regions of

the ring.

  

The propellers appear as double dashes in the two close-up discovery

images at the right and are circled. The unseen moonlets, each roughly

the size of a football field, lie in the center of each structure. These

two images were taken during Saturn orbit insertion on July 1, 2004, and

are presented here at one-half scale. Resolution in the original images

was 52 meters (171 feet) per pixel. The horizontal lines in the image

represent electronic noise and do not correspond to ring features.

  

The propellers are about 5 kilometers (3 miles) long from tip to tip, and

the radial offset (the "leading" dash is slightly closer to Saturn) is

about 300 meters (1,000 feet).

  

The propeller structures are unchanged as they orbit the planet. In that

way, they are much like the wave pattern that trails after a speedboat as

it skims across a smooth lake. Such a pattern is hard to discern in a

choppy sea. In much the same way, scientists think other effects may be

preventing Cassini from seeing the propellers except in very bland parts

of the rings.

  

See PIA07790 and PIA07791 for additional images showing these features.

  

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European

Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory,

a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages

the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. The

Cassini orbiter and its two onboard cameras were designed, developed and

assembled at JPL. The imaging operations center is based at the Space

Science Institute in Boulder, Colo.

  

For more information about the Cassini-Huygens mission visit

saturn.jpl.nasa.gov. The Cassini imaging team

homepage is at ciclops.org.

  

credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Accession Number: 2000.100.3385

 

Creator: Church, Albert Cook

 

Summary: Detail of a rope in a Propeller

 

Title: Propeller

 

Medium: Negative, Glass, Dry Plate

 

Dimensions: 4" x 5"

  

General Information about the New Bedford Whaling Museum is available at: http://www.whalingmuseum.org

  

New Bedford Whaling Museum Photo Archives at:

508-997-0046 ext.207

photoresearch@whalingmuseum.org

The prop plane that took us to Broken Hill. Not my first time in a commercial airlines propeller aircraft, but the experience is still very very different to that of flying in a large jet. For instance, the stewardess declined to serve us coffee because of turbulence!

Hamilton Propeller plant, East Hartford, Connecticut

(Alophia drummondii). Deep East Texas.

 

An uncommon species of savannahs and xeric uplands.

Shelby County Airport

Calera, AL

(2012)

inspired by Maxelmann

Aeroporto Bacacheri - SBBI

EMB-810D Seneca III, PT-RUP

Wharrell's Hill near Bothel. Morning of 14th November. Taken on Diana mini with Fuji Neopan 400CN. C41 Processed

Image taken 25.06.2016 by David Moth. At Fly Party 2016,Montagnana Aerodromo Nr Montagnana (PD) Italy

Large bronze propeller on display along Washington DC's Southwest waterfront promenade. According to the inscription on the hub, it's almost 8 feet in diameter and weighs 2750 pounds. It may have come from a WWII Gato-class submarine.

Spring Bloom Kings Park Western Australia

Three of the Pilatus PC-9s of the RAAF Red Arrows (correction: Roulettes) taking a rest at the RAAF Air Pageant last year

Displayed at Henry Ford Museum

I took this picture at the well known fair ground, The Hoppings. The Hoppings has been around since 1882 and is a very well known event in the North East.

 

This shot reminds me of a propeller. Really like the motion in this picture and also the colours.

photoby Keith C Wilson at Gloucester

This beer style was created in the mid-1750's. A dark full-flavoured beer but smoother and less bitter than stout. Made with softened water, Propeller London Porter is a blend of pale, roasted and chocolate malts, hopped with English and North American varieties

(Alophia drummondii). Deep East Texas.

 

A member of the iris family, the propeller flower is commonly known as the pinewoods lily. It's range is restricted to eastern Texas, Western Louisiana, and extreme western Mississippi, southwestern Arkansas and southeastern Oklahoma. Here it grows in open woodlands with sandy, well drained soils. It's blooms are said to last only a day.

1 2 ••• 27 28 30 32 33 ••• 79 80