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BNSF 4827 & BNSF 8804 head east towards Ethel, Mo. on the BNSF Marceline Sub. with long string of autoracks.
I’ve waited nine years for this moment…
For reasons unknown to us, Nex and Stringer would never see another release after 2012, despite two full waves of sets they could easily have been integrated into. With Bulk growing increasingly orange and Stringer’s lack of unified color scheme, my belief is that Nex and Stringer underperformed in BREAKOUT as the two cheaper sets of the second wave and were cut from the lineup for the remainder of Hero Factory’s run.
Until today…
With a helmet commissioned from @galva_nize_ I present BRAIN ATTACK Stringer. He is of the same height class as Stormer and Surge and is equipped with a Hero Sword. He also has a scanning apparatus affixed to his arm for performing sonar sweeps and picking up thermal signatures. I went for a more hefty build as Stringer deserves the extra muscle. I have also tried to combine his blue BREAKOUT color scheme and his orange 1.0 colors to create something that honors both.
I have taken great lengths to keep the design language of the other BRAIN ATTACK sets:
- Melee weapons
- Silver or Gunmetal secondary color
- Transparent armor piece
- Hero Core Clamp and Visor
This build uses a shoulder configuration first used by Beardly_Designs. I don’t think anything else draws inspiration from other MOCs but, if you feel it does, let me know!
Building this MOC is honestly a dream come true for me. I’m glad I can finally give Stringer the form he deserves.
Spring thaw at String Lake on a late May evening. Went several days without seeing the mountains, but it was still a great trip last spring. I am trying really hard not to complain about not being there this spring.
Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, USA
© All Rights Reserved
And when you thought that Darlington's fleet couldn't get any more wacky, it did ! It goes without saying that the Ward Dalesman was a new model to the fleet, as was the choice of Wadham Stringer Vanguard body, but the difference here was that the chassis was designed in conjunction with Darlington's engineers, to produce as close a match as possible to their Seddon RU buses, with a Gardner 6HLXB rear engine, and semi-automatic gearbox. But Ward Bros., with their very limited facilities and buying power, found themselves over-stretched, and struggled to deliver the 6 vehicles ordered. The vehicles were said to be good once they did enter service, but no further orders were placed, and the Ward business folded in 1984.
The entire batch was sold early in 1994, just prior to the company's terminal decline, and went to Devaway Travel near Chester, who got a further 2-3 years out of them, before they all sadly went for scrap.
Darlington town centre, 10/7/85
L.I.C presents
Bikini String
with a hud 12 colors
compatible with bodymesh, Tonic, Belleza, Slink, Maitreya and TMP
Outer Banks
The Outer Banks are a 200-mile-long (320 km) string of barrier islands and spits off the coast of North Carolina and southeastern Virginia, on the east coast of the United States. They cover most of the North Carolina coastline, separating Currituck Sound, Albemarle Sound, and Pamlico Sound from the Atlantic Ocean.
The Outer Banks are a major tourist destination and are known around the world for their wide expanse of open beachfront. The Cape Hatteras National Seashore has four campgrounds open to visitors.[1] The treacherous seas off the Outer Banks and the large number of shipwrecks that have occurred there have given these seas the nickname Graveyard of the Atlantic. The Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum is located in Hatteras Village near a United States Coast Guard facility and the Hatteras ferry.
The English Roanoke Colony—where Virginia Dare was born[2]—vanished from Roanoke Island in 1587. The Lost Colony, written and performed to commemorate the original colonists, is the second longest running outdoor drama in the United States and its theater acts as a cultural focal point for much of the Outer Banks.
The Wright brothers' first flight in a controlled, powered, heavier-than-air vehicle took place on the Outer Banks on December 17, 1903, at Kill Devil Hills near the seafront town of Kitty Hawk.[3] The Wright Brothers National Monument commemorates the historic flights, and First Flight Airport is a small, general-aviation airfield located
The Outer Banks is a string of peninsulas and barrier islands separating the Atlantic Ocean from mainland North Carolina. From north to south, the largest of these include: Bodie Island (which used to be an island but is now a peninsula due to tropical storms and hurricanes), Hatteras Island, Ocracoke Island, Portsmouth Island, and the Core Banks.[4] Over time, the exact number of islands and inlets changes as new inlets are opened up, often during a breach created during violent storms, and older inlets close, usually due to gradually shifting sands during the dynamic processes of beach evolution.
The Outer Banks stretch southward from Sandbridge in Virginia Beach down the North Carolina coastline. Sources differ regarding the southern terminus of the Outer Banks. Generations of North Carolina schoolchildren have learned that the term includes the state's three prominent capes: Cape Hatteras, Cape Lookout, and Cape Fear.[5][6] Other sources limit the definition to two capes (Cape Hatteras and Cape Lookout) and coastal areas in four counties (Currituck County, Dare County, Hyde County,and Carteret County).[7] Some authors include Carteret's Shackelford Banks and Bogue Banks in their descriptions,[7] while others exclude Bogue Banks.[8] Still other references restrict the definition to the northern three counties of Currituck, Dare, and Hyde.[9]
The abbreviations OBX (Outer Banks) and SOBX (Southern Outer Banks) are modern terms used to promote tourism and to market a variety of stickers, t-shirts, and other items to vacationers. OBX, which originated first, is generally used in the northern Outer Banks. SOBX is used primarily in Carteret County, which is also known as the Crystal Coast.
The northern part of the Outer Banks, from Oregon Inlet northward, is actually a part of the North American mainland, since the northern inlets of Bodie Island and Currituck Banks no longer exist.[10] It is separated by the Currituck Sound and the Intracoastal Waterway, which passes through the Great Dismal Swamp occupying much of the mainland west of the Outer Banks. Road access to the northern Outer Banks is cut off between Sandbridge and Corolla, North Carolina, with communities such as Carova Beach accessible only by four-wheel drive vehicles. North Carolina State Highway 12 links most of the popular Outer Banks communities in this section of the coast. The easternmost point is Rodanthe Pier in Rodanthe, NC .
The Outer Banks are not anchored to offshore coral reefs like some other barrier islands and as a consequence they often suffer significant beach erosion during major storms. In fact, their location jutting out into the Atlantic makes them the most hurricane-prone area north of Florida, for both landfalling storms and brushing storms offshore. Hatteras Island was cut in half on September 18, 2003, when Hurricane Isabel washed a 2,000 foot (600 m) wide and 15 foot (5 m) deep channel called Isabel Inlet through the community of Hatteras Village on the southern end of the island.[11] The tear was subsequently repaired and restored by sand dredging by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. It was cut off once again in 2011 by Hurricane Irene. Access to the island was largely limited to boat access only from August to late October until another temporary bridge could be built.
Day 109 - April 19, 2010
Standard guitars come with six strings arranged from thinnest to thickest. The sixth string, (the one closest to the ceiling) is the thickest and produces the lowest pitch. But aside from the deep tone it creates, of equal if not more importance is the fact that the sixth string is also used as the reference string for tuning a guitar.
When tuning, you see, the sixth string is tuned first, then all the others follow. If you tune one string wrong, the one that follows will be out of tune. You get the picture (pun intended).
Life, on the other hand, may be less about tuning, but as the strings of a guitar are interdependent, so are we. How we chose to live our life in turn affects the lives of those closest to us.
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Bangle: rstyle.me/~7TjEs
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The red string of fate, also referred to as the red thread of destiny, red thread of fate, and other variants, is an East Asian belief originating from Chinese legend and is also used in Japanese legend. According to this myth, the gods tie a red cord around the ankles of those that are to meet one another in a certain situation or help each other in a certain way.The two people connected by the red thread are destined lovers, regardless of time, place, or circumstances. This magical cord may stretch or tangle, but never break. This myth is similar to the Western concept of soulmates or a destined flame.
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Photographer Spotlight Nov 2024 : Blog
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Stringers - Mellor Strata Ultra / Mercedes Sprinter- LO19YYC is seen at Castleford Bus Station operating service 499 to Ferry Fryston on September 14th 2019
Gear :Nikon D90 + Sigma 10-20mm
Photo processed : Photoshop CS 5 + silver efex pro 2 plug in
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Hot lasers criss-crossing the field of battle? Hardly. Just a few strands of spider's silk stretched taut, wet with rain drops and dew and gleaming in the bright morning sun.
But, if you ask me, lasers'd be cooler.
Piano Pieces. Photography Assignment #1 : Variations
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