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40 tooth cog made out of a chainring you can see the pulley bolt just misses cog on a shift. I took it up a 40 percent grade with the 22 tooth front without any failures.
iron, silver, brass - ferro, argento, ottone. This pendant was inspired by the ancient tooth amulets. Also Experimental's latest works made an impact on me :)
www.flickr.com/photos/experimetal/2064138001/
The brass is inlayed into the iron in an undercut groove. This is the first time that I used engraver for inlaying. The idea came from Benvenuto Cellini, who made gold inlays in iron/steel. I want to try that as well, but for now...just brass :)
The whole piece is 4.4 cm, from this the visible part of the tooth is 2 cm.
Fleetnumber 230 in the Happy Days Coaches of Stafford fleet is this Scania K380EB4 / Irizar i6 LC15HDC. It is seen passing through Oxford in September 2015.
Iloca IIa with Jlitar 3.5/45 V in Prontor-S shutter
The top model of the early Iloca cameras. The "II" indicates a rangefinder, and the "a" a body shutter button. An amazing camera, without question, very compact and very massive. Similar cameras of that time without rangefinder and with a 3- or 4-element lens usually have front lens focusing, the according upgraded versions with rangefinder move the whole lens inclusive shutter then, here the designer found another solution: for focusing only the rear lens is moving, so it can easily be coupled to the rangefinder, and shutter and front lens are firmly mounted to the camera body. The distance can be set with the lever near the lens, and it is displayed in the small hole on top.
The film is loaded through the bottom, like on a historic L*ica, with the same problem. It's very difficult to push the film over the sprocket wheel, so it is easier to do the "L*ica-cut", extend the film tip by removing some perforation on the upper side. I read, that some Ilocas have a removable DOF-chart on the back to make film loading easier, but mine hasn't. Instead the DOF-chart is in the top of the camera bag. Without back door the camera has another annoying feature: it has a double exposure lock and the shutter button is unlocked by turning the sprocket wheel, to which you have no access, so it is impossible to test the shutter without film. Luckily my exemplar has a solution for that problem: at the place where the shutter release lever was on models without body shutter button is a small slot. You can release the shutter there with the help of a tooth pick. This is extremely helpful when you've pressed the shutter button without tensioning the shutter before. (The cable release is locked together with the shutter button.)
Unfortunately the rangefinder of my copy is out of order. The semi-transparent mirror in the viewfinder part is more or less completely transparent, so you can't see the double image. I think, my camera is not the only early Iloca with that fault.
Another peculiar thing: the top housing is only hold by the two transport wheels, there are no extra screws.
After removing top and bottom of the camera, you can unmount the casing. Four screws are hidden under the leatherette beside the lens barrel. I did that and found ... pieces of film in the film chamber behind the lens - not really a surprise.
In most articles about Iloca you can read, that Wilhelm Witt was the owner of the company. Meanwhile I found out, that he wasn't its founder, but it was Walter Illing, in 1947. Obviously he was responsible for the "Il" in Iloca. Also the lens of my Iloca I is labeled with "Jlling Jlitar", however, the lenses were produced by Enna, Isco or Steinheil.
"Solo lo stolto percorre correndo il cammino della vita senza soffermarsi ad osservare le bellezze del creato."
(Proverbio tibetano)
Delaney had 4 teeth pulled today and was such a trooper. She laid on the couch and drank milkshakes. This is the note she wrote to the tooth fairy tonight. She's bringing her teeth for show and tell monday.
Buck Tooth Sugar
Where: Warminster, PA
When: April 2012
Settings: 1/100", f6.3, ISO 100, Flash
Notes: Not what I would typically use for a focus point
My daughter is almost a year old!! :( Time flies.
I wanted to get a snapshot of her first tooth finally cutting through! It's so cute and she never lets me see it. This was the best I could do :)
Mortal Muses Weekly Challenge: Week 1 - stay cool
I know I'm not really thinking outside the box by just posting a photo in her kiddie pool, but I just couldn't resist when I saw the cute look on her face!
This is Tooth. He's a baby Venus Flytrap. He isn't very happy though...partly because he endured some postal service trauma in a dark box and partly because it just isn't very sunny here...and he desperately needs bright sunlight. I hope he perks up soon.
318/365
Androdon aequatorialis
Parque Nacional Natural La Ensenada de Utría, Chocó department, Colombia.
Male. A bizarre and unique hummer with tooth-like serrations near the end of the bill. This species is intermediate between the hermits and the "typical" hummers. Ornithologists are unsure which subfamliy to place them in, or if they deserve their own subfamily. He was singing - here's a link to the audio recording.
9808
Michigan Engineering researchers have developed a rigid and durable new material inspired by tooth enamel.
Unavoidable vibrations, such as those on an airplane, cause rigid structures to age and crack, but most materials that effectively absorb vibration are soft, so they don’t make good structural components such as beams, chassis or motherboards. Researchers chose to model their new material after enamel because it is strong and rigid, but also effectively absorbs vibrations.
The research for this new material is presented in the paper, “Abiotic tooth enamel,” in the journal Nature.
Nicholas Kotov is the Joseph B and Florence V Cejka Professor of Engineering in the Chemical Engineering Department at the University of Michigan College of Engineering. Bongjun Yeom was a postdoctoral researcher in chemical engineering at U-M at the time of this study, and co-authored the paper.
Photo: Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
Little dude managed to yank out a loose tooth on the hike up hill. He was thoroughly amazed that the tooth fairy managed to find us up on top of a mountain in a tent.