View allAll Photos Tagged Repairing
drained canal and all your favourite skyscrapers - the Walkie Talkie, the Scalpel, the Gherkin and the Cheesegrater.
Pretty Cissy to begin with but needed eyelashes, base painted around eyes because of eyeshadow removal, given lashes, shadow and more dramatic brows. Knee & hip splits repaired & wig cleaned & styled in original 'do and seated further back on head.
This one was laying face down and broken in half. Cemetery has a woman working on cleaning, repairing, and reseating headstones and she is doing a fantastic job.. This one is a lot larger than it looks in this picture.
One of the overhead wiring gangs making repairs to the tramway's overhead, seen opposite Blackpool Pleasure Beach in July 2001.
An unidentified Metroline (ex First) enviro 200 is seen undergoing some structural repairs at Metroline's "CELF" engineering facility
onlinepcmasters.com provides Online Computer Repair, Remote Computer Repair, Tech Support and PC Support in UK.
Since the newest photos appear first, you will have to scroll a ways through these photos to see what happened to my Shox as I was wearing them one day. The dangling Shox pod and all.
In the interim, I had tied some wire under the pod to keep it from dragging, but it slipped out from time to time, and then the other side came apart and was dragging the same way.
I wanted a repair that was quick and simple. I thought of adhesives, but I've found that they tend to fail when flexed. So I ended up stringing a wire through the heel knotted under the heel and under the insole inside the shoe.
That kept the heel from flopping under the toebox, but, as you can see from some of these photos, it still shifted side to side. Totally wearable but strange feeling as the pods slipped out one side and then the other.
I realized I could pull the slack of the wire into the sneaker holding the pod and heel more in place, and just bend it over under my foot to keep it in place. I also dispensed with the insoles. I had thought that standing on the knot in the wire would hurt my heels, but I really don't even feel it.
So the first two of these pictures show the modified repair, which so far seems to work. If this doesn't hold up, I'll dispense with the Shox pods and have yet another pair of shoes with negative "lift". I'm sure that will be fine.
Tirukalukundram
... with palm tree leafs ...
2006-01-10 16:34
Canon EOS 5D ,Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM
ISO-100 F/4,5 1/125sec
Please, no logo's in your comment
158/366
One negligent SUV driver cost me 9 days without the 1990 Miata, had to miss showing in a classic car show and to drive a bread box rental.
My Main camera has been at the camera doctors for the last month, as it had been eating batteries while turned off. I got it back yesterday, and took its picture
Repairs to this X-34 landspeeder are continuing on past dusk.
It was actually only 5:30pm but night comes early in November on Batuu!
After some high winds, a crew has to replace the Trauma Center sign... that's what they get for going with the lowest bidder.
A plastic spoiler (?) came loose at the front of my car so I've "fixed" it with a cable tie to a more substantial part of the car. I have to take the car in for a service and MoT in February so I hope it'll be OK until then
Since the newest photos appear first, you will have to scroll a ways through these photos to see what happened to my Shox as I was wearing them one day. The dangling Shox pod and all.
In the interim, I had tied some wire under the pod to keep it from dragging, but it slipped out from time to time, and then the other side came apart and was dragging the same way.
I wanted a repair that was quick and simple. I thought of adhesives, but I've found that they tend to fail when flexed. So I ended up stringing a wire through the heel knotted under the heel and under the insole inside the shoe.
That kept the heel from flopping under the toebox, but, as you can see from some of these photos, it still shifted side to side. Totally wearable but strange feeling as the pods slipped out one side and then the other.
I realized I could pull the slack of the wire into the sneaker holding the pod and heel more in place, and just bend it over under my foot to keep it in place. I also dispensed with the insoles. I had thought that standing on the knot in the wire would hurt my heels, but I really don't even feel it.
So the first two of these pictures show the modified repair, which so far seems to work. If this doesn't hold up, I'll dispense with the Shox pods and have yet another pair of shoes with negative "lift". I'm sure that will be fine.