View allAll Photos Tagged Pump
leica q typ116
i see these old pumps all over taiwan, most not in working order or able to pump water.
This is the pump house for canyon dam in Lake Almanor California. Taken with an Apple IPhone 4. Apps: procamera, camera+ , snapseed, fx photo studio and luminance
FINALIST IN THE IPHONEOGRAPHY FX Photo Studio Show at the SoHo Digital Art Gallery December 2011.
The pump house behind the concrete seating and the sea running wild .
Like the idea of going out there to check the door .
Ocean Baths
Newcastle . NSW
Former Pump House that provided hydraulic pressure for lifts and cranes at the nearby Tobacco and Stanley wharehouses, a recent go ahead has been authorised for conversion into a mega restaurant, not a bad idea considering the Everton Football Club new stadium is taking shape just across the road, on the site of the old Bramley Moore Dock,.....much custom on match days!?.
Abandoned water pumps somewhere in Queen NY taken in the late 80's with Minolta SRT-101, Rokkor-PF f=58mm 1.4 Kodak Panatomic-X 32 ISO
I love getting all dressed up for work but I just can't make up my mind whether to wear pumps or boots. What do you think I should wear to the office?
The twin Beam Engines at Papplewick Pumping Station, in full steam. The sight, sound, and even the smell; a true "sensory delight"!
Taken at a local pond. The water pump doesn't work now but it used to. Clouds blurred using a 10 stop nd filter and then stylised in Photoshop
Cyberopolis
Pumping color
(thanks to I.P and SM)
Super staurated view of Johnnie V Meier's gas station museum near Embudo NM
Esso gas pump at abandoned Bob & Bob Speleo General Store, Sink's Grove, WV. The store t one time was the world's largest outfitter for caving supplies.
Location: Faversham, Kent, England
Before the arrival of a piped water supply in 1864, local households were dependent for their supply of water on pumps and wells. The first pump on the site of the Market Place next to Guildhall, provided by a local benefactor in 1635, was replaced by the present elaborate cow tailed pump in 1855.
Dench Designs:
Daffodil Water Pump (9 prims) with running water and sound and 3 animated birds.
LM to this store: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Rookery/197/52/22
"With the introduction of steam power, it became possible to quickly and reliably drain the great swamps of the area. A series of pumping stations was placed along the dykes surrounding these swamps, and proved highly effective for the job..."
As a person from the Netherlands, one cannot fail to notice that our land sometimes needs a hand to stay dry... Ever since I visited some of our older facilities for that job, I wanted to build them in LEGO. So here you go ;)
It has an interior, featuring machines. Sadly, the setup makes it all but impossible to get some decent pictures done (doh!).
Abbey Pumping Station museum comprises collections of industrial, technological and scientific items relating to Leicester. The pump house has four working examples of Woolf compound rotative beam engines made by Gimsons, a Leicester engineering business started by brothers Josiah and Benjamin Gimson in 1842.
A pair of derelict petrol pumps on the A9 on the edge of Brora, Scotland.
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The twin Beam Engines at Papplewick Pumping Station, in full steam. The sight, sound, and even the smell; a true "sensory delight"!
This old hand pumper was captured in historic Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Until the mid-19th century, most fires were fought by water transported to the scene in buckets. Original hand pumpers discharged their water through a small pipe or monitor attached to the top of the pump tub.[1] It was not until the late 1860s that hoses became widely available to convey water more easily from the hand pumps, and later steam pumpers, to the fire.
Abbey Pumping Station museum comprises collections of industrial, technological and scientific items relating to Leicester. The pump house has four working examples of Woolf compound rotative beam engines made by Gimsons, a Leicester engineering business started by brothers Josiah and Benjamin Gimson in 1842.