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SLR Class :- G2

Introduction year :- 1951

Years of Withdrawn :- Between 1983-2001

No of Locos :- 08

Loco Nos :- 531 to 538

Builder :- North British Locomotive

State :- Scotland

Power Plant :- Paxman - V12 RPHXL

Mode of Power transmission :- Diesel Electric

Power :- 625 hp

rpm :- 1250

Weight :- 54 ton

Length :- 37' 9"

Wheel arrangement :- Bo-Bo

Brake system : - Vacuum

Max speed :- 32 Km/h

Gauge : - 1676 mm

Type :- Shunting Locomotive

Purpose/Used line :- Yard shunting and short distance freight trains.

 

G2 533 Loaned to Colombo Port Authority 1952-1968

G2 535 at Bandarawela as a Preserved Locomotive since 2011.

All Locomotives withdrawn from Service.

 

Information as at 30.10.2020

Mercedes SLR Mclaren in Monaco this Summer

Why are you striving these days

Why are you trying to earn grace

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EOS 30.SLR

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linhwsk.com/

Still can't believe I saw this car in my hometown.

SLR No. 19

CAMERA: Polaroid SLR 680 SE

FILM: Polaroid 600 exp. 7/2009

DATE: 9/13/09

 

After a great meal on Rue des Bouchers in Brussels, Belgium. Hand-held long exposure steadied against wall.

I was never a great fan of Konica, the oldest Japanese camera manufacturer. The lenses are highly regarded, but somehow, I kept avoiding their cameras, especially the SLRs. I confess that I am completely surprised with this T3 model. it is not Olympus compact or beautiful, but my Nikon FM pales in comparison with this Konica for build quality and bulk. Weighing a few grams less than my bicycle, this Konica has a fit and finish beyond belief. The film rails are one of the best that I have ever seen. Every part is superbly machined and assembled, I have no ideia how much it cost, but whtever the price, it delivered the goods.

 

The viewfinder is reasonably bright with the 1,4 lens, sporting a split image and micro prism arrangement. It is also very informative with the chosen speed and auto apertures. The battery is dead, I know that it is a shutter priority camera, and comes from a line of pioneers of auto SLRs. I still have to understand how it works. Last but not least, a modern vertical travel shutter, again, a Konica first.

In 1962 Sylvania (having merged into GTE) sold off the Argus camera and optics company to the much smaller Mansfield Industries. The combined companies adopted "Argus, Inc." as their name but were now headquartered in Chicago.

 

Mansfield had a relationship with Mamiya as OEM for some Mansfield electric eye cameras; and soon the new Argus would introduce its first-ever SLR model, modified from the Mamiya Prismat NP. To my knowledge the Argus model used an entirely unique bayonet mount and only the three lenses shown here were ever produced to fit this. The camera pictured also features a clip-on selenium light meter which couples to the dial for selecting shutter speeds.

Emirates mall (Dubai)

Very nice SLR, parked in a back alley in Knightsbridge. Looked great in matt white with black wheels.

Like this shot and thought it looked best in B&W, what do you think?

Canon powershot A300

Only the third SLR I've seen in Amsterdam, and the first 722 Edition. This guy owns several amazing cars such as a Bugatti Veyron and a BMW Z8. :-)

Barra Landscape - 35 mm SLR Film - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives in Nanaimo, British Columbia where he works also as a writer and a personal trainer.

@Zwolle, the Netherlands

  

Wow, this is the first time that I see a Mercedes SLR McLaren (Roadster) And that in a strange color, British green!

  

Take a look at my Facebook fan page for more news, pictures and updates: www.facebook.com/BasAutomotivePhotography

 

This Mercedes got Diplomatic number plates, wonder which countries embassy it belongs too

www.flickr.com/photos/jdmason/

Taken by my friend Jake :) Check him out!

If you like the photo's plz come and join my facebook-page to stay updated.

Feel free to join my fan page automotive photography by piolew on Facebook :)

 

More pictures of Monaco Top Marques 2013.

More pictures of Monaco Top Marques 2012.

More pictures of Monaco Top Marques 2011.

More pictures of Monaco Top Marques 2010.

Athirapalli falls was our second and final destination of the trip. This place was filled with monkeys. My cousin and I were trying to capture them and he tried to go really close. This was taken during one of those moments when the little one was curiously looking into the lens.

SMS Rail Lines

1950 EMD FP7A

SLRS 902

Ex-Reading (RDG) 902

Many people, including Ivor Matanle,consider the lenses of this camera among the finest ever made. It is beautifully engineered, but extremely heavy. This is Snr.T 7954. Also in my collection is Z 17564.

The Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR (W196S) was an iconic 2-seat sports racer that took sportscar racing by storm in 1955, winning that year's World Sportscar Championship before a catastrophic crash and fire at Le Mans ended its domination prematurely.

wht do u think of it ? its my cousinz car

Fujica ST701, 50mm lens

 

Fairly obviously, taken by me in mirror and reversed digitally

   

SLR infront of a tour boat

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All Photos © ilmistika creations

 

Zeiss Ikon West made SLR cameras beginning in 1953. There were a number of series of Contaflex, which resolve into 3 basic groups: the original models I and II had non-interchangeable, front element focusing Tessar lenses, and they are the simplest, most reliable and easiest to fix. The III, IV and Super series had Tessar lenses with interchangeable front elements that permitted wide angle, tele and macro options, and had unit focusing which added complexity and sacrificed some reliability and ease of service. Alongside this range came a lower priced series, the Alpha, Beta and Prima, which had Pantar lenses (not made by Carl Zeiss but sourced, reportedly from Rodenstock, by Zeiss Ikon) . These had interchangeable front components like the later Tessars but with front-element focusing. They aren't as good as the Tessars but they aren't bad, and the added simplicity of the front element focusing makes them a bit easier to live with. This is a Prima, with 30, 45 and 75mm lenses and a +1 closeup lens.

I was at Sunset Drive & Red Road at an art festival with my wife. I took my trusted pocket camera with me, as I usually do. I didn't even realize I'd shot a McLaren SLR that day, until I started editing the pics recently. I love the late afternoon light catching this stylish silver machine, as it zips through the intersection.

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