View allAll Photos Tagged Propeller
Camera: Hasselblad 500C/M. Film: Kodak Ektachrome E100G, home-developed with the Tetenal Colortec E-6 3-bath kit.
I made this image for our son Eddie's 30th birthday (7-6-09). Made from Sierra Remote Observatory 8 with 16" RCOS and Apogee U16m camera. About 8 hours of H-alpha filtered data along with a few hours of RGB data for star colors was used. I though it was an appropriate gift for our PhD aeronautical engineer who is working in designing better rotor blades for wind power generation.
Single camera side step anaglyph EOS40D with EF-s 15-85 lens. Can be viewed with Red/Blue stereo glasses.
My Heros...The Trauma Hawk air ambulance team. They swoop in to emergency situations and whisk victims of accidents to the hospital by air. They are the reason many people are still alive today, including Merle (see "The Reason"). The pilot is standing, the medic is sitting in the doorway. In this photo they have just flown someone in to the Delray Medical Center. There is another medic who is not shown... he has just taken the patient to the ER.
Producing up to 16% greater thrust than the standard propeller; the MT is the prop of choice when it comes to these Vedeneyev M14PF Radial.
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A Lockheed Howard 250 Tri-Gear propeller spinner is seen at the Lone Star Flight Museum, Thursday, June 26, 2025. ©2025 Billy Calzada
The Xtreme 3000 at Clacton Air Show 2013
Engine: Lycoming AE10 540 L1 B 5
Propeller: Three blade MT
Length: 20.6ft - 6m
Wing Span: 24.6ft - 7.5m
Wing Area: 121.25 sq ft - 11.25m
Gross weight: 1875lb - 852.7kg
Max Speed: 259mph - 416kph
Cruise Spped: 213mph - 343kph
Maximum Cruise Speed: 242mph - 210kts - 390kph
Manoeuvring Speed: 200mph - 322kph
Rate of Climb: 3500ft/min - 1067m/min
Stalling Speed: 59mph - 94kph
LNER 91113 propels an Edinburgh to Kings Cross working.
Askham Bar, York (Chaloners Whin) 3 December 2019
Very bright (not always a good thing), and becoming colder.
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Stenanthemum pimeleoides (propeller plant) flowering in the Tom Gibson Nature Reserve, Epping Forest, Tasmania.
Not sure what distinguishes Stenanthemum from Spyridium but the plants look awfully similar. Like Spyridium vexilliferum, Stenanthemum seeds take a year to mature and are shed at the peak of flowering in mid-Simmer.
Be sure to check out the Vimeo video for some crazy footage.
This is a result of propeller speed VS capture rate of iPhone sensor, combined with refraction from the double-paned window glass.
Driving down the dual carriageway I saw this object glinting in the sunlight. Turned out to be this propeller,thought it worth a photo or two.
There is a really nice bar in Graz I love to go, it is the Propeller. Clean, good food and beer, a small variety of wine and a extremely cool and smooth garden.