View allAll Photos Tagged Streamlined

On December 27, 1934, the Commodore Vanderbilt Locomotive, the “World’s First-Powered Streamlined Steam Locomotive” was exhibited at the Grand Central Terminal. The New York Times and other newspapers gave it a headline with photographs and proclaimed it to be a great day for the railroads and the beginning of a new era in locomotive design.

 

[Full story at nycshs.files.wordpress.com/2014/07/pages-from-1981q3.pdf

 

The modern looking streamlined Peugeot 402 series was presented at the 1935 Paris Motor Show. In the early 1930s revolutionary aerodynamic theories were applied for the first time to mass produced cars. Avant-garde cars like 1934 Tatra 77 and the 1934 Chrysler Airflow gained a lot of positive attention. The 402 was Peugeot's answer to its direct competitor the streamlined 1934 Citroën TA.

The 402 was developed by the Département Études Carrosseries, under supervision of Henri Thomas.

The Peugeot 02-series was also called Fuseau-Sochaux.

 

The 402 series replaced the predecessors 401 and 601 (from 1934-1935).

Many body variants were available.

The 402 B with an increased engine, followed in Summer 1938.

Note the lack of a running board, and this convex boot lid. It appeared with the renewed 402 B, and it covers the spare wheel.

 

Besides several Art Deco details, the headlamps placed behind the grille were very remarkable.

See also: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peugeot_402

 

2142 cc L4 petrol engine.

Performance: 60 bhp.

C. 1200 kg.

Production Peugeot 402 series: Sept. 1935-July 1942.

Production Peugeot 402 B Berline this version: Oct. 1938-June 1940.

Original first reg. number: June 30, 1936 (according to RDW, but that's not correct).

New Dutch pseudo-historical reg. number: April 20, 2009 (private import).

With current owner since June 22, 2024.

 

Seen in car museum Visscher Classique. It's a new car museum originated from a large car collection of director Henk Visscher, mixed with a lot of passion and ambition.

The collection focuses on the French brands that fall under the Stellantis group (formerly PSA).

More info: visscherclassique.nl/museum/

 

Buren, Visscher Classique Car Museum, Schuilheuvelstraat, Aug. 5, 2023.

 

© 2023 Sander Toonen Halfweg | All Rights Reserved

A detail element from the 1959 Corvette Stingray concept car. This prototype was designed by Bill Mitchell and Larry Shinoda, and built by General Motors in the late '50's.

 

It's one freekin' awesome looking vehicle.

 

Copyright © 2011 by Craig Paup. All rights reserved.

Any use, printed or digital, in whole or edited, requires my written permission.

  

If there is one thing that Detroit’s automobile manufacturers could agree on in the mid 1930s, it was the idea that the future would be streamlined, sleek. The future was going to look fast even when it was standing still.

 

GM’s Parade of Progress began hauling displays built for the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair around the country in the flashy Streamliners. When the GM circus came to your town, they brought a technological vision of the future wrapped in Art Deco style.

 

The public didn’t really know what to think of the Chrysler Airflow coupes. Both vehicles commanded a lot of second looks when they were traveling the fledgling highway systems of America.

 

This image is a bit unusual. We had to mix scales to get an image that looks correct. The Autocult Streamliner is listed everywhere as being in 1/43 scale but that cannot be! It dwarfs anything in our 1/43rd scale motor pool. It looks better next to a 1/24th scale piece but we went with 1/32 scale for this pairing. Stylistically and visually, that is what seemed to look right sitting next to the Streamliner.

  

This is a forced perspective photograph of 1/43 and 1/32 scale die-cast models vehicles in front of a real background.

 

Autocult 1936 GM Streamliner

 

Signature Models 1936 Chrysler Airflow

Great Blue Heron In Flight

Miles of streamlined shelf rolling up some hay bales north of Ringwood, OK, a couple weeks ago—May 18th. It seems to always be a struggle finding a good time and perspective for those rolls, then suddenly, a perfect smattering of them lined up vs. that fanned out arcus.

IMG_1066 2023 08 09 file

South Africa

Cape Town

Boulders Beach

 

Wishing everyone a very healthy and Happy New Year 2021!!!!

 

The African penguin (Spheniscus demersus), also known as the jackass penguin and black-footed penguin, is a species of penguin, confined to southern African waters. Like all extant penguins it is flightless, with a streamlined body, and wings stiffened and flattened into flippers for a marine habitat.

 

The penguin makes a sound like a jackass braying.

 

Adults weigh on average 2.2–3.5 kg (4.9–7.7 lb) and are 60–70 cm (24–28 in) tall. It has distinctive pink patches of skin above the eyes and a black facial mask.

 

The pink gland above their eyes helps them to cope with changing temperatures. When the temperature gets hotter, the body of the African penguin sends more blood to these glands to be cooled by the air surrounding it. This then causes the gland to turn a darker shade of pink.

 

The African penguin is a pursuit diver and feeds primarily on fish and squid. Once extremely numerous, the African penguin is declining rapidly due to a combination of several threats and is classified as endangered.

 

The African penguin is only found on the south-western coast of Africa, living in colonies on 24 islands between Namibia and Algoa Bay, near Port Elizabeth, South Africa. It is the only penguin species that breeds in Africa.

 

Two colonies were established by penguins in the 1980s on the mainland near Cape Town, namely Boulders Beach near Simon's Town and Stony Point in Betty's Bay. The only other mainland colony is in Namibia, but it is not known when it was established. - Wikipedia

1955 Mercedes Benz W196R Stromlinie at the Mercedes Benz Museum, Stuttgart.

The streamlined styling of the 1939 Plymouth is among the best examples of art deco automotive form and ornamentation developed in the 1930s.

A landmark building for two famous fashion international designer labels; Tommy Hilfiger Calvin Klein. Both brands are owned by PVH. Their portfolio includes also Van Heusen, IZOD, ARROW, Warner’s, Olga and Geoffrey Beene, as well as the digital-centric True&Co. intimates brand.

 

The buildings concept intents to celebrates Amsterdam’s fresh creative energy and references the city’s rich maritime history. Wanting the building to have a commanding presence, local firm MVSA Architects obtained permission to build at nearly double the permitted 21.5-metre height restriction in the area. At 50 metres high, the headquarters towers above its neighbours.

 

To underlines the maritime link from the ‘sand’ the architects set the upper 10 floors at a slight cantilever so that the building leans towards the water's edge. The white presence resembles the shape and style of the streamlined boats that sail past.

 

The cantilevered façade gives the building a dynamic look. The project architect Wouter Thijssen stated it as: "Like a superyacht, ready for departure." And of course everybody knows Tommy Hilfiger has a rather large scaled yacht in the Caribbean (St. Maarten)

 

Yacht theme has also been translated into the inside of the building. The offices are arranged in an open-plan layout, with different areas separated by glass walls. Thin wooden panels cover the ceiling and walls, while white-washed wooden boards provide flooring

 

Technical stuff|

The reason and inspiration why I started taking these kind of hyper long exposures is explained earlier in my stream. And as promised, no bridge this time.

 

This is a single, tripod based, shot. Taken at 200ISO, f11 (this is merely a part of the full composition. For the full composition I needed a higher aperture, 130.01 seconds at 16 mils.

Post-production was executed with Lightroom. I used several inverted radial filters and adjustment brushes. Finally, I added some copyright signs (in PS). The latter is, alas, there to stay due to the fact that my photos were frequently copied. So, don't bother commenting on that.

 

Please view more of my photography (images and video) at the following websites. Totally, I have 25+ million views; 4,100+ followers/subscribers and 15,000+ views daily.

 

*Flickr: www.flickr.com/people/viv_vivekananda/

*Fluidrive www.fluidr.com/photos/viv_vivekananda

*YouTube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCt5wf3DvvWAqgUd9NMUItVw

*500px: 500px.com/p/svive1?view=photos

*Facebook: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61560235015998

*Instagram www.instagram.com/viv_vivekananda/

You may purchase my images at:

*Shootproof: vivvivekanandaphotography.shootproof.com/gallery/26583890...

*Getty Images: www.gettyimages.com.au/search/2/image?family=creative&...

 

Ibises are a group of long-legged wading birds in the family Threskiornithidae, that inhabit wetlands, forests and plains. Ibises usually feed as a group, probing mud for food items, usually crustaceans. It is widespread across much of Australia. It has a predominantly white plumage with a bare, black head, long down curved bill and black legs. They are monogamous and highly territorial while nesting and feeding. Most nest in trees, often with spoonbills or herons. Due to its increasing presence in the urban environment and its habit of rummaging in garbage, the species has acquired a variety of colloquial names such as tip turkey; and bin chicken, and in recent years has become an icon of popular culture, being regarded with passion, wit, and, in equal measure, affection and disgust. R_17485

The streamlined dream like clinker built oak of The Skidbladner calls out to those that can pack their sea chest as a seat from which to person the oars on an imaginary journey and hopefully the visitors will have notions of goods in their sea chest to trade and room there also to bring back their hard won treasures? This now land bound longboat affords a great prospect to experience Viking visions. The replica of the archaeological recovered Gokstad ship now sits next to a reproduction longhouse and both have room enough to house your imagination and also to inspire your dreams.

 

The Viking Unst Project,

A968

Brookpoint, Haroldswick, Scotland, ZE2

60.7853, -0.8343

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

  

The Skidbladner

www.shetlandamenity.org/the-skidbladner

 

Scale: HO

Category: Steam

Subcategory:

Type: STREAMLINED

Road: Reading Railroad (RDG)

Whyte: 4-6-2

Description: READING "CRUSADER" LOCOMOTIVE

Importer: MTS Imports, Inc (MTS)

Builder: Ajin

Year(s): 1993

Qty Made: 200

Caracals are very elegant, medium-sized cats with beautiful eyes and long ear tufts. Sadly, a lot of the time their ears are not upright, so you'll have to take my word for it. I swear they know when you're about to click the shutter. :)

 

Taken on a photography day at the Wildlife Heritage Foundation in Kent.

My failed 1/30 tracking attempt of the Aventador. Screw you C63 Black Series chassis!

 

Front of a 1935 Chrysler Airflow. At the time these were built the were designed to be very ahead of their time and be more aerodynamic than anything else on the road. Location not disclosed at owners request.

 

Night, near full moon, 30 second exposure, handheld light producing device set to white.

 

Click on the image, because it's best BIG on BLACK!!!

1955 Moto Guzzi Nibbio II Record Car

 

Facebook Page

 

Youtube Channel

 

Instagram

St Margaret’s, Rottingdean, Sussex, UK

 

St Margaret’s was designed by Richard Jones in the Streamlined Moderne style and built in 1938 by Charles Neville’s Saltdean Estate Company. Neville was a speculator who dreamed of developing all of the land between Rottingdean and Newhaven. The Estate Company was also responsible for two notable Art Deco developments in Saltdean, the Lido and the Ocean Hotel.

 

Some Art Deco buildings such as St Margaret’s were not universally popular when first constructed. One resident of Rottingdean, a Miss Jayne Seymour, formed a local Ratepayers’ Association in response to the St Margaret’s development. In a letter to the Town Clerk of Brighton Corporation she wrote: “I am to say that the Association views this monstrous structure with horror and dismay; feelings which are shared by practically every inhabitant of Rottingdean,” The Association evolved into the Rottingdean Preservation Society which continues to serve the people of Rottingdean to this day.

 

In the early 2000s St Margaret’s was found to be structurally unstable due to corrosion of its steel frame. As a consequence the front of the building has been reconstructed.

 

(Ref. www.buildingopinions.com/2008/01/29/st-margarets-3-2/)

Henry M. Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad Line reached Palm Beach in 1894. The Seaboard Airline Railroad Line laid tracks to Palm Beach as late as 1921-1924. It was after 1921 that the Seaboard Airline tracks reached West Palm Beach. Reference to the Seaboard Airline Railroad Station appears in a book printed in 1926.

 

S. Davis Warfield was president of Seaboard Air Line and in 1924 Warfield built a cross-state line that serviced West Palm Beach and Miami and Homestead in 1926, making a direct rail connection from one coast to the other, across the state. In 1938 the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Airline Railroad Line formed a network over Florida. Trains were air-conditioned and streamlined, and power was generated by Diesel-electric locomotives.

 

Stockholders in the railroad were important Palm Beach residents, and this station combined their taste in architecture, and their desire for service and convenience, for the community related to their vacation and retirement residences.

 

L. Phillips Clarke, who designed all of the Seaboard Railroad stations, built his first station at Auburndale. The West Palm Beach station appeared in 1924-1925.

 

The north-south dimension, paralleling the tracks, is approximately 178 feet. It is 43 feet deep, not including (at the sides) a 13-foot platform on the west. The building is mainly one story high, with a single office on a two-story level near the center and a three-stage tower on the south corner of the east or entrance facade on Tamarind Avenue.

 

The plan is rectangular, divided essentially in half, with express room and baggage room to the left or south, and behind the loggia the two waiting rooms, now one, separated on the east by restrooms and on the west by the ticket office. The loggia surrounds most of the front and ends, and the shed—roofed passenger platform on the rear or trackside.

 

The City of West Palm Beach, following a purchase of the building in 1988, tapped local architecture firm Oliver Glidden & Partners to head a $4.3 million restoration of the structure. The project was completed and the station rededicated in a ceremony attended by the Florida Governor in April 1991. Architect Robert D. Brown directed the restoration of ornamental cast stone elements, exterior masonry, doors, windows, and iron and tile work. The red clay tile roof was replaced, as were the electrical, lighting, plumbing and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Abatement of lead and asbestos was further required to bring the historic structure up to modern building code standards. The restoration effort earned the Florida Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1994.

 

In summer 2012, the city finished an improvement project that included the installation of new sidewalks and more than five dozen trees around the building. The improvements were funded with a $750,000 Transportation Enhancement grant from the Federal Highway Administration, to which the city provided a $150,000 local match.

 

The station has two side platforms, with access to the station on both sides. West of the southbound platform is a long loop of bus bays serving Palm Tran routes. East of the northbound platform is the station house, a small parking lot, and bus stops for Greyhound Lines buses and Tri-Rail shuttles.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Palm_Beach_Seaboard_Coastline_...

historic-structures.com/fl/west_palm_beach/seaboard_railr....

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

I've discovered a new fascination for small moths. They might look inconspicuous and boring, but once you get close you notice they both have cool patterns, interesting colours and quite often an amusing look on their little faces!

 

This one which, along with a couple of buddies, was on the side of a friend's house is a common grass-veneer (Agriphila tristella) and was somewhere between 12 and 15 mm in length.

This streamlined saloon, with a monocoque aluminum coachwork, was the last big Panhard. Its sleeve valve engine was outdated, but apart from that this baroque and expensive car was extremely modern : all-round independent wheels and one of the first with a dual hydraulic brake circuit. Three seats in the front with a central steering wheel were difficult to accept, and as from 1939 the steering wheel was moved to the left-hand side. 2.230 models were built.

 

2.861 cc

6 Cylinder

75 hp

 

Autoworld

www.autoworld.be

Brussels - Belgium

May 2021

In camera multiple exposure

Henry M. Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad Line reached Palm Beach in 1894. The Seaboard Airline Railroad Line laid tracks to Palm Beach as late as 1921-1924. It was after 1921 that the Seaboard Airline tracks reached West Palm Beach. Reference to the Seaboard Airline Railroad Station appears in a book printed in 1926.

 

S. Davis Warfield was president of Seaboard Air Line and in 1924 Warfield built a cross-state line that serviced West Palm Beach and Miami and Homestead in 1926, making a direct rail connection from one coast to the other, across the state. In 1938 the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Airline Railroad Line formed a network over Florida. Trains were air-conditioned and streamlined, and power was generated by Diesel-electric locomotives.

 

Stockholders in the railroad were important Palm Beach residents, and this station combined their taste in architecture, and their desire for service and convenience, for the community related to their vacation and retirement residences.

 

L. Phillips Clarke, who designed all of the Seaboard Railroad stations, built his first station at Auburndale. The West Palm Beach station appeared in 1924-1925.

 

The north-south dimension, paralleling the tracks, is approximately 178 feet. It is 43 feet deep, not including (at the sides) a 13-foot platform on the west. The building is mainly one story high, with a single office on a two-story level near the center and a three-stage tower on the south corner of the east or entrance facade on Tamarind Avenue.

 

The plan is rectangular, divided essentially in half, with express room and baggage room to the left or south, and behind the loggia the two waiting rooms, now one, separated on the east by restrooms and on the west by the ticket office. The loggia surrounds most of the front and ends, and the shed—roofed passenger platform on the rear or trackside.

 

The City of West Palm Beach, following a purchase of the building in 1988, tapped local architecture firm Oliver Glidden & Partners to head a $4.3 million restoration of the structure. The project was completed and the station rededicated in a ceremony attended by the Florida Governor in April 1991. Architect Robert D. Brown directed the restoration of ornamental cast stone elements, exterior masonry, doors, windows, and iron and tile work. The red clay tile roof was replaced, as were the electrical, lighting, plumbing and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Abatement of lead and asbestos was further required to bring the historic structure up to modern building code standards. The restoration effort earned the Florida Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1994.

 

In summer 2012, the city finished an improvement project that included the installation of new sidewalks and more than five dozen trees around the building. The improvements were funded with a $750,000 Transportation Enhancement grant from the Federal Highway Administration, to which the city provided a $150,000 local match.

 

The station has two side platforms, with access to the station on both sides. West of the southbound platform is a long loop of bus bays serving Palm Tran routes. East of the northbound platform is the station house, a small parking lot, and bus stops for Greyhound Lines buses and Tri-Rail shuttles.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Palm_Beach_Seaboard_Coastline_...

historic-structures.com/fl/west_palm_beach/seaboard_railr....

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

This Mazda RX7 is one of the most amazing cars I have ever photographed. The Lamborghini paint was so vivid, the motor sounded amazing, and the car looks so streamlined and aggressive! I'm definitely very excited to share this with you guys!

 

The car belongs to Brent Villareal, the marketing director for TunerLifeStyleTV.com - an awesome online magazine. Definitely give it a look if you haven't seen it. www.TunerLifeStyleTV.com

 

The photoshoot was done late in the evening, we were quite short on time so I did the best I could and improvised where necessary due to a lack of equipment. Most of my good lightstands, my umbrellas, and a few other things were not with me at the time. Pardon the dull backgrounds, we didn't have alot of time to venture out and try different settings.

 

Brent is definitely interested in being covered in D-Sport magazine, hopefully with these photos I'll be able to grab someones attention over there and shoot again when the car is finished (soon).

 

Before I forget, check it out - TunerLifeStyleTV's Video Coverage of the RB7!

 

Let me give you a quick run down of the modifications to the car!

 

ENGINE

 

RB25DET

CUSTOM 2ROW INTERCOOLER

CUSTOM COOLING FANS

CUSTOM RADIATOR

CUSTOM DOWNPIPE

GREDDY BOV

GREDDY FULL TI EXHAUST

WALBRO 255 FUEL PUMP

 

ALL WORK DONE BY POWER-FAB AUTOMOTIVE

 

DRIVETRAIN

 

RB25DET 5-SPEED TRANSMISSION

 

SUSPENSION

 

CUSCO P3 COILOVERS

CUSCO REAR STRUT BAR

CUSCO REAR STRUT SUPPORTS

 

WHEELS, TIRES, BRAKES

 

FR. 18X9.5 +15 225/35/18 ADVAN

RR 18X12 +0 335/35/30 KDW2

HRE 540 SERIES

 

ROTORA 6-POT FRONT

ROTORA 4-POT REAR

 

EXTERIOR

 

BURNOUT FRONT BUMPER (SHINE AUTO)

BURNOUT FRONT WIDE FENDERS 25MM (SHINE AUTO)

BURNOUT SIDESKIRTS (SHINE AUTO)

PETTIT REAR FLARES/MOLDED 50MM

FUJITA FEED CARBON FIBER HOOD

99 SPEC TAIL LIGHTS

99 SPEC FRONT COMBO WINKERS

SHINE AUTO REAR LIP SPOILER

LP640 MURCIALAGO MONTERAY BLUE 3 STAGE PAINT

 

INTERIOR

 

DEFI BF 60MM SET UP

OIL TEMP

WATER TEMP

BOOST

DEFI CONTROL UNIT

(BLUE)

MAZDA NARDI EDITION 2001 STEERING WHEEL

KENWOOD TOUCH SCREEN

 

COMING SOON

 

- R-Magic GT spec Widebody kit

- Full Audio Setup

- Motor Build... (you guys will love this!)

- Carbon Fiber Rear Diffuser

Henry M. Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad Line reached Palm Beach in 1894. The Seaboard Airline Railroad Line laid tracks to Palm Beach as late as 1921-1924. It was after 1921 that the Seaboard Airline tracks reached West Palm Beach. Reference to the Seaboard Airline Railroad Station appears in a book printed in 1926.

 

S. Davis Warfield was president of Seaboard Air Line and in 1924 Warfield built a cross-state line that serviced West Palm Beach and Miami and Homestead in 1926, making a direct rail connection from one coast to the other, across the state. In 1938 the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Airline Railroad Line formed a network over Florida. Trains were air-conditioned and streamlined, and power was generated by Diesel-electric locomotives.

 

Stockholders in the railroad were important Palm Beach residents, and this station combined their taste in architecture, and their desire for service and convenience, for the community related to their vacation and retirement residences.

 

L. Phillips Clarke, who designed all of the Seaboard Railroad stations, built his first station at Auburndale. The West Palm Beach station appeared in 1924-1925.

 

The north-south dimension, paralleling the tracks, is approximately 178 feet. It is 43 feet deep, not including (at the sides) a 13-foot platform on the west. The building is mainly one story high, with a single office on a two-story level near the center and a three-stage tower on the south corner of the east or entrance facade on Tamarind Avenue.

 

The plan is rectangular, divided essentially in half, with express room and baggage room to the left or south, and behind the loggia the two waiting rooms, now one, separated on the east by restrooms and on the west by the ticket office. The loggia surrounds most of the front and ends, and the shed—roofed passenger platform on the rear or trackside.

 

The City of West Palm Beach, following a purchase of the building in 1988, tapped local architecture firm Oliver Glidden & Partners to head a $4.3 million restoration of the structure. The project was completed and the station rededicated in a ceremony attended by the Florida Governor in April 1991. Architect Robert D. Brown directed the restoration of ornamental cast stone elements, exterior masonry, doors, windows, and iron and tile work. The red clay tile roof was replaced, as were the electrical, lighting, plumbing and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Abatement of lead and asbestos was further required to bring the historic structure up to modern building code standards. The restoration effort earned the Florida Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1994.

 

In summer 2012, the city finished an improvement project that included the installation of new sidewalks and more than five dozen trees around the building. The improvements were funded with a $750,000 Transportation Enhancement grant from the Federal Highway Administration, to which the city provided a $150,000 local match.

 

The station has two side platforms, with access to the station on both sides. West of the southbound platform is a long loop of bus bays serving Palm Tran routes. East of the northbound platform is the station house, a small parking lot, and bus stops for Greyhound Lines buses and Tri-Rail shuttles.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Palm_Beach_Seaboard_Coastline_...

historic-structures.com/fl/west_palm_beach/seaboard_railr....

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

Norfolk and Western J Class, 611, rumbles east through the outskirts of Goshen, VA as they head for North Mountain to meet a CSX train.

The modern looking streamlined Peugeot 402 series was presented at the 1935 Paris Motor Show. In the early 1930s revolutionary aerodynamic theories were applied for the first time to mass produced cars. Avant-garde cars like 1934 Tatra 77 and the 1934 Chrysler Airflow gained a lot of positive attention. The 402 was Peugeot's answer to its direct competitor the streamlined 1934 Citroën TA.

The 402 was developed by the Département Études Carrosseries, under supervision of Henri Thomas.

The Peugeot 02-series was also called Fuseau-Sochaux.

 

The 402 series replaced the predecessors 401 and 601 (from 1934-1935).

Many body variants were available.

The 402 B with an increased engine, followed in Summer 1938.

Note the lack of a running board, and this convex boot lid. It appeared with the renewed 402 B, and it covers the spare wheel.

 

Besides several Art Deco details, the headlamps placed behind the grille were very remarkable.

See also: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peugeot_402

 

2142 cc L4 petrol engine.

Performance: 60 bhp.

C. 1200 kg.

Production Peugeot 402 series: Sept. 1935-July 1942.

Production Peugeot 402 B Berline this version: Oct. 1938-June 1940.

Original first reg. number: June 30, 1936 (according to RDW, but that's not correct).

New Dutch pseudo-historical reg. number: April 20, 2009.

With current owner since June 22, 2024.

 

Seen in car museum Visscher Classique. It's a new car museum originated from a large car collection of director Henk Visscher, mixed with a lot of passion and ambition.

The collection focuses on the French brands that fall under the Stellantis group (formerly PSA).

More info: visscherclassique.nl/museum/

 

Buren, Visscher Classique Car Museum, Schuilheuvelstraat, Aug. 5, 2023.

 

© 2023 Sander Toonen Halfweg | All Rights Reserved

La Florida

Background Montaña Blanca (left) and Volcán Testeyna (right)

BWC 14-10-2013 IMG_8233

One of the entrances to Canary Wharf Underground. It does get windy here

“Tree Swallows are streamlined small songbirds with long, pointed wings and a short, squared or slightly notched tail. Their bills are very short and flat….. Handsome aerialists with deep-blue iridescent backs and clean white fronts, Tree Swallows are a familiar sight in summer fields and wetlands across northern North America. They chase after flying insects with acrobatic twists and turns, their steely blue-green feathers flashing in the sunlight. Tree Swallows nest in tree cavities; they also readily take up residence in nest boxes….. Tree Swallows feed on small, aerial insects that they catch in their mouths during acrobatic flight. After breeding, Tree Swallows gather in large flocks to molt and migrate. In the nonbreeding season, they form huge communal roosts.”

Status : Least Concern

Source : Cornell University Lab of Ornithology

  

Emigrant Lake – Jackson County – Oregon – USA

 

New York Central Railroad Nr. 5450 was a "Hudson" type steam locomotive built by Alco in 1938

 

This streamlined locomotive was used for high speed passenger service on the New York Central's famous passenger trains, such as the 20th Century Limited

 

On September 7, 1943, Nr. 5450 suffered a boiler explosion in Canastota, New York, killing three enginemen and putting her out of service until the end of World War II due to a steel shortage

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Central_Hudson

April 1933 a slightly improved version was introduced from the initial Superior 400 version. The body was less boxy and slightly more streamlined.

 

The Dutch journalist Paul Schilperoord (1977) tracked down one of the last remaining Standard Superior in eastern Germany. It had survived in the DDR but it had been radically modified in the meantime. The front doors, windscreen and rear lights were taken from a 1958-1965 Trabant P50/P60.

Only the chassis with engine and the complete nose of the Superior was kept original.

The car was transported to the Netherlands for restoration back to its original appearance.

After finishing restoration Paul Schilperoord and Lorenz Schmid visited a classic VW Beetle meeting in Germany with their Standard Superior. Many visitors did not recognize the car or even know about it. Some were wondering what they were doing here on this Beetle meeting. Even today Ganz and his creation had to tackle disbelieve and skepticism.

By the way the Superior drivers were spoken to sternly by uncle officer because the license plate was missing.

 

Some background info:

In the 1930s there was an increasing need for a real people's car in the German-speaking region. A car affordable for the masses, the so called 'Volkswagen'.

One of the leading engineers at that time was Josef Ganz (Budapest, 1898-1967). After he had worked for Adler, BMW, Daimler-Benz and Röhr, he developed his own minicar in 1931, the 'Maikäfer'.

In Standard Fahrzeugbau he found a manufacturer and in 1932 the Standard Superior 400 was launched (officially presented at the IAMA, the Berlin international motor show, Febr. 1933).

This cheap car was based on the 'Maikäfer' principles: tubular chassis, rear engine, independent wheel suspension and with a streamlined body.

 

Journalist Paul Schilperoord wrote a very interesting book about the history of the development of the VW Beetle in the 1930s. In this book he describes the life and works of Josef Ganz who's technical ideas were taken over by Ferdinand Porsche. The book reads like a very exciting story.

See: Paul Schilperoord, Het ware verhaal van de Kever: hoe Hitler het ontwerp van een Joods genie confisqueerde, Veen Magazines, 2009.

In 2019 a documentary was made about Josef Ganz and his life story: Ganz, How I lost my Beetle (2019), by Suzanne Raes: www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNuS4GwU7CU

 

395 cc 2 cylinder 2-stroke rear engine.

450 kg.

Production Standard Superior 400 base: April 1933-1934.

Original first reg. number: July 1, 1933.

New Dutch pseudo-historical reg. number: May 6, 2019.

Same owner since private import.

 

Image source: video still from documentary Ganz, How I lost my Beetle (2019). Seen in cinema Het ketelhuis, Amsterdam, May 10, 2019.

Original camera operator, place and date unknown.

 

Amsterdam, May 10, 2019.

 

© 2019 Schilperoord/Sander Toonen, Amsterdam/Halfweg | All Rights Reserved

Henry M. Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad Line reached Palm Beach in 1894. The Seaboard Airline Railroad Line laid tracks to Palm Beach as late as 1921-1924. It was after 1921 that the Seaboard Airline tracks reached West Palm Beach. Reference to the Seaboard Airline Railroad Station appears in a book printed in 1926.

 

S. Davis Warfield was president of Seaboard Air Line and in 1924 Warfield built a cross-state line that serviced West Palm Beach and Miami and Homestead in 1926, making a direct rail connection from one coast to the other, across the state. In 1938 the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Airline Railroad Line formed a network over Florida. Trains were air-conditioned and streamlined, and power was generated by Diesel-electric locomotives.

 

Stockholders in the railroad were important Palm Beach residents, and this station combined their taste in architecture, and their desire for service and convenience, for the community related to their vacation and retirement residences.

 

L. Phillips Clarke, who designed all of the Seaboard Railroad stations, built his first station at Auburndale. The West Palm Beach station appeared in 1924-1925.

 

The north-south dimension, paralleling the tracks, is approximately 178 feet. It is 43 feet deep, not including (at the sides) a 13-foot platform on the west. The building is mainly one story high, with a single office on a two-story level near the center and a three-stage tower on the south corner of the east or entrance facade on Tamarind Avenue.

 

The plan is rectangular, divided essentially in half, with express room and baggage room to the left or south, and behind the loggia the two waiting rooms, now one, separated on the east by restrooms and on the west by the ticket office. The loggia surrounds most of the front and ends, and the shed—roofed passenger platform on the rear or trackside.

 

The City of West Palm Beach, following a purchase of the building in 1988, tapped local architecture firm Oliver Glidden & Partners to head a $4.3 million restoration of the structure. The project was completed and the station rededicated in a ceremony attended by the Florida Governor in April 1991. Architect Robert D. Brown directed the restoration of ornamental cast stone elements, exterior masonry, doors, windows, and iron and tile work. The red clay tile roof was replaced, as were the electrical, lighting, plumbing and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Abatement of lead and asbestos was further required to bring the historic structure up to modern building code standards. The restoration effort earned the Florida Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1994.

 

In summer 2012, the city finished an improvement project that included the installation of new sidewalks and more than five dozen trees around the building. The improvements were funded with a $750,000 Transportation Enhancement grant from the Federal Highway Administration, to which the city provided a $150,000 local match.

 

The station has two side platforms, with access to the station on both sides. West of the southbound platform is a long loop of bus bays serving Palm Tran routes. East of the northbound platform is the station house, a small parking lot, and bus stops for Greyhound Lines buses and Tri-Rail shuttles.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Palm_Beach_Seaboard_Coastline_...

historic-structures.com/fl/west_palm_beach/seaboard_railr....

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

Henry M. Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad Line reached Palm Beach in 1894. The Seaboard Airline Railroad Line laid tracks to Palm Beach as late as 1921-1924. It was after 1921 that the Seaboard Airline tracks reached West Palm Beach. Reference to the Seaboard Airline Railroad Station appears in a book printed in 1926.

 

S. Davis Warfield was president of Seaboard Air Line and in 1924 Warfield built a cross-state line that serviced West Palm Beach and Miami and Homestead in 1926, making a direct rail connection from one coast to the other, across the state. In 1938 the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Airline Railroad Line formed a network over Florida. Trains were air-conditioned and streamlined, and power was generated by Diesel-electric locomotives.

 

Stockholders in the railroad were important Palm Beach residents, and this station combined their taste in architecture, and their desire for service and convenience, for the community related to their vacation and retirement residences.

 

L. Phillips Clarke, who designed all of the Seaboard Railroad stations, built his first station at Auburndale. The West Palm Beach station appeared in 1924-1925.

 

The north-south dimension, paralleling the tracks, is approximately 178 feet. It is 43 feet deep, not including (at the sides) a 13-foot platform on the west. The building is mainly one story high, with a single office on a two-story level near the center and a three-stage tower on the south corner of the east or entrance facade on Tamarind Avenue.

 

The plan is rectangular, divided essentially in half, with express room and baggage room to the left or south, and behind the loggia the two waiting rooms, now one, separated on the east by restrooms and on the west by the ticket office. The loggia surrounds most of the front and ends, and the shed—roofed passenger platform on the rear or trackside.

 

The City of West Palm Beach, following a purchase of the building in 1988, tapped local architecture firm Oliver Glidden & Partners to head a $4.3 million restoration of the structure. The project was completed and the station rededicated in a ceremony attended by the Florida Governor in April 1991. Architect Robert D. Brown directed the restoration of ornamental cast stone elements, exterior masonry, doors, windows, and iron and tile work. The red clay tile roof was replaced, as were the electrical, lighting, plumbing and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Abatement of lead and asbestos was further required to bring the historic structure up to modern building code standards. The restoration effort earned the Florida Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1994.

 

In summer 2012, the city finished an improvement project that included the installation of new sidewalks and more than five dozen trees around the building. The improvements were funded with a $750,000 Transportation Enhancement grant from the Federal Highway Administration, to which the city provided a $150,000 local match.

 

The station has two side platforms, with access to the station on both sides. West of the southbound platform is a long loop of bus bays serving Palm Tran routes. East of the northbound platform is the station house, a small parking lot, and bus stops for Greyhound Lines buses and Tri-Rail shuttles.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Palm_Beach_Seaboard_Coastline_...

historic-structures.com/fl/west_palm_beach/seaboard_railr....

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

Henry M. Flagler's Florida East Coast Railroad Line reached Palm Beach in 1894. The Seaboard Airline Railroad Line laid tracks to Palm Beach as late as 1921-1924. It was after 1921 that the Seaboard Airline tracks reached West Palm Beach. Reference to the Seaboard Airline Railroad Station appears in a book printed in 1926.

 

S. Davis Warfield was president of Seaboard Air Line and in 1924 Warfield built a cross-state line that serviced West Palm Beach and Miami and Homestead in 1926, making a direct rail connection from one coast to the other, across the state. In 1938 the Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Airline Railroad Line formed a network over Florida. Trains were air-conditioned and streamlined, and power was generated by Diesel-electric locomotives.

 

Stockholders in the railroad were important Palm Beach residents, and this station combined their taste in architecture, and their desire for service and convenience, for the community related to their vacation and retirement residences.

 

L. Phillips Clarke, who designed all of the Seaboard Railroad stations, built his first station at Auburndale. The West Palm Beach station appeared in 1924-1925.

 

The north-south dimension, paralleling the tracks, is approximately 178 feet. It is 43 feet deep, not including (at the sides) a 13-foot platform on the west. The building is mainly one story high, with a single office on a two-story level near the center and a three-stage tower on the south corner of the east or entrance facade on Tamarind Avenue.

 

The plan is rectangular, divided essentially in half, with express room and baggage room to the left or south, and behind the loggia the two waiting rooms, now one, separated on the east by restrooms and on the west by the ticket office. The loggia surrounds most of the front and ends, and the shed—roofed passenger platform on the rear or trackside.

 

The City of West Palm Beach, following a purchase of the building in 1988, tapped local architecture firm Oliver Glidden & Partners to head a $4.3 million restoration of the structure. The project was completed and the station rededicated in a ceremony attended by the Florida Governor in April 1991. Architect Robert D. Brown directed the restoration of ornamental cast stone elements, exterior masonry, doors, windows, and iron and tile work. The red clay tile roof was replaced, as were the electrical, lighting, plumbing and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. Abatement of lead and asbestos was further required to bring the historic structure up to modern building code standards. The restoration effort earned the Florida Trust Award for Historic Preservation in 1994.

 

In summer 2012, the city finished an improvement project that included the installation of new sidewalks and more than five dozen trees around the building. The improvements were funded with a $750,000 Transportation Enhancement grant from the Federal Highway Administration, to which the city provided a $150,000 local match.

 

The station has two side platforms, with access to the station on both sides. West of the southbound platform is a long loop of bus bays serving Palm Tran routes. East of the northbound platform is the station house, a small parking lot, and bus stops for Greyhound Lines buses and Tri-Rail shuttles.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Palm_Beach_Seaboard_Coastline_...

historic-structures.com/fl/west_palm_beach/seaboard_railr....

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

One of the Ann Arbor's distinctive streamlined cupola cabeese once sat next to the former C&O mainline in Traverse City, along with an ex AA boxcar as part of a historical display. Unfortunately, the equipment was repeatedly vandalized in TC, and has since been moved to a new home at the Buckley Old Engine Show in Buckley, MI. I've always thought this style of caboose was cool. It is interesting to note that both of the AA's parent railroads, the Wabash and later the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton, also operated this style of caboose, though they had no relation to each other. The DT&I’s cabooses of this style were actually former Ann Arbor cabooses that were transferred during the DT&I’s ownership of the Annie.

 

Interested in purchasing a high-quality digital download of this photo, suitable for printing and framing? Let me know and I will add it to my Etsy Shop, MittenRailandMarine! Follow this link to see what images are currently listed for sale: www.etsy.com/shop/MittenRailandMarine

 

If you are interested in specific locomotives, trains, or freighters, please contact me. I have been photographing trains and ships for over 15 years and have accumulated an extensive library!

The cockatiel (Nymphicus hollandicus), also known as weiro bird, or quarrion, is a small parrot that is a member of its own branch of the cockatoo family endemic to Australia. They are prized as household pets and companion parrots throughout the world and are relatively easy to breed. As a caged bird, cockatiels are second in popularity only to the budgerigar. The cockatiel is the only member of the genus Nymphicus. It was previously considered a crested parakeet or small cockatoo; however, more recent molecular studies have assigned it to its own subfamily, Nymphicinae. It is, therefore, now classified as the smallest of the Cacatuidae (cockatoo family). Cockatiels are native to Australia, favouring the Australian wetlands, scrublands, and bushlands.

The Regent parrot or rock pebbler (Polytelis anthopeplus) is a bird found in southern Australia. It has predominantly yellow plumage with a green tail. The bird is found primarily in eucalyptus groves and other wooded areas of subtropical southwestern Australia, as well as in a smaller area of subtropical and temperate southeastern Australia. Seeds make up the bulk of its diet. A yellowish-green parrot, long and slender, with similar patterning exhibited by the sexes. They are between 14½–16½ (37–42 cm) in length and weigh four ounces. The female is generally more green, the male much yellower. The tail feathers above are dark blue-green, those beneath are black. The male is generally yellow, with several shades on the head; its back is generally a collection of colorful shades of green; its beak generally red. Immature birds, like the female, are duller in colour than males. A social bird, found in pairs or joining up to twenty others in flocks. The southwest subspecies, where it is common to abundant, may occur in mobs of up to one hundred birds. This produces an attractive spectacle when in flight. The movement in flight is fast and erratic, though described as graceful, with swept back wings. 57580

The Mercedes Benz 540K Stromlinienwagen at the Techno Classica in Essen.

A full view of tenderless non-streamlined Manchurian Railway SL7 4-6-2 753 on Sujiatun shed in 1983.

 

Built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in 1934 for the South Manchuria Railway it was operated for the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo. SL7s pulled the Asia Express & trains reached a top speed of 140 kilometres per hour (87 mph). A second streamlined SL7 - 751 - was also present.

 

My notes say the loco cab behind on the left is of another Manchurian Railway pacific; SL5 4-6-2 282. They also say there was another streamlined SL7 here; 755 but I note that today in the Shenyang Railway Museum the two preserved are 751 and 757.

 

To be fair the chalked number on the cab of this pacific looks more like x56 than 753!

A streamlined express train headed by an F-unit in Rock Island paint scheme is passing through a street running section in the art deco Metropius fantasy world. The train is a TT scale (1:120) model, for the environment, I used a screenshot from a Metropius movie.

 

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